'It was a miracle': Islander gets her 2nd kidney from grieving family
Nancy Russell | CBC News | Posted: May 23, 2017 10:00 AM | Last Updated: May 26, 2017
'It was a miracle to imagine that this donation had saved these three lives'
Ann Bolger has advocated for organ donation for decades, and recently, she became the recipient of a life-saving kidney donated by a grieving family.
"Even though it's been my motto for many many years, I've never experienced it in this way," said Bolger.
"That I got a phone call and somebody — the family of a 19-year-old — donated the organs."
This was Bolger's second kidney transplant. The first one, 27 years ago, was a kidney donated by her brother.
- P.E.I. woman looking for a second kidney after 26 years
- Additional shift at QEH will make room for 9 dialysis patients
"It was a level of gratitude that I don't know that I've ever known in my life to understand that this grieving family had lost their 19-year-old and gave this gift," said Bolger.
"It's someone I will never meet, someone I will never know, that saved my life."
The phone call
Bolger has been on the waiting list for a new kidney since Dec. 22, 2015.
"I was on and off the waiting list a couple of times over the 18 months, due to friends and family who were getting tested to give me a kidney that turned out not to be able to."
A friend had just been ruled out as a transplant possibility days before the call.
"I was sitting in the hair dresser's chair and not expecting it because I had just gone back on the list two days before because my friend wasn't able to give me a kidney," said Bolger, when she got the call from the transplant coordinator in Halifax.
"It's an out of body experience, it's like it's not real."
She headed to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital for one last dialysis treatment, then headed for Halifax.
"You have a bag at home that's been there for a year and it just numbs you and yet you're so excited."
Three lives saved
The transplant surgery took place the evening of May 5, just over 24 hours after the call.
"In the morning there was a liver transplant, in the afternoon another kidney, then me," said Bolger.
"It was a miracle to imagine that this donation had saved these three lives."
She said she would see the other transplant recipients in the hallway, as they also recovered, not talking but knowing they had gone through a shared experience.
"That some family, somewhere, in their deepest grief over losing a child were able to make the decision and give me my life," said Bolger.
"For them to allow someone else to live a healthy life as a result of their donations, I keep using the word remarkable because I don't know what else to call it," added Tim Bolger, Ann's husband.
Getting better
Tim admits it has been an emotional roller coaster waiting for the transplant, but that the recovery has been joyful to watch.
"The first thing I noticed, it was probably four or five days after the surgery, and her colour was back in her face," he said.
"It just kind of floored me that she had that glow that was so recognizable, that seemed to have gone away and I didn't even know that it had left until I saw it come back again."
He has been at his wife's side in Halifax as she makes the transition to outpatient, and soon back to the Island.
"We're still in the process of understanding completely the different feelings that are going to come with getting better," he said.
"I think that's going to take a little more time to fully grasp that."
The new normal
"I have never felt better in my entire life," said Ann Bolger.
Before the transplant, her creatinine levels, which measure kidney function, were over 600. A few days ago, the level was 111, within the normal range of 80 to 120.
"I never realized how sick I was and I feel totally different," she said.
"I can feel my body functioning."
'I am so grateful'
Bolger's transplant was just a week before Mother's Day, one that she knows would have been painful for the mother who had just lost her child.
"On Mother's Day, you sit there and I really wish she knew, the mother, what gift she has given to me," said Bolger.
She plans to write the mother a letter, which can have no identifiers in it, to express her gratitude.
"If it gives her peace to know that I will take care of her child's kidney," said Bolger.
"I am so grateful, it is a humbling experience."
- MORE P.E.I. NEWS | 'There are many people in crises': P.E.I. chief of mental health calls for better supports
- MORE P.E.I. NEWS | As house pets in Kensington, do ducks fit the bill?