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Brave Muff woman gets kidney transplant 04.04.08

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

CARNAMOYLE woman Vienna White returned home last week to Inishowen for the first time since undergoing a successful kidney transplant operation at Beaumont Hospital on February 29.
Speaking ahead of Organ Donor Awareness Week, which runs to April 5, the 26-year old said she found it difficult to find adequate words to describe how happy she is to have her new kidney. White had been on dialysis since August 2006 and on the national transplant list since December of that year.
In the early hours of February 28 she got the long-anticipated phonecall to inform her a possible donor had been found.

“I was in bed sleeping when the call came from Beaumont [Hospital] to say they had found a match and to get down there as soon as possible. I got to the hospital at 6:15am. The operation didn’t happen straight away. There were chest x-rays and they put my blood in the kidney to see if it would be rejected, but it was a perfect match, apparently.”
Her operation took place at 1:30pm on the February the 29th.
Vienna White pictured with her husband Robbie.
“The first three days after the operation I was totally out of it and the first week after the operation I don’t remember much of anything.”
Released eight days after her transplant, Vienna returned home to Letterkenny where she has been recuperating ever since.
In the presumed consent versus informed consent debate, Vienna is in favour of a change from opting in to opting out of organ donation.
“It would be better if you had to opt out of being a donor instead of signing up. Unless you sign something to say that you don’t want your organs donated, they should be available for transplant. It would make organs more available,” she said.
Vienna acknowledges that she is one of the lucky ones.
“There was one woman I met in Beaumont who was waiting six years for a transplant operation. That kind of makes you feel a bit guilty.”
In the weeks since her operation Muff woman has woken up in the middle of the night expecting to be plugged into her dialysis machine. Her new lease of life, she acknowledges, will take a little getting used to.
Vienna is required to go to Beaumont twice a week for the next six weeks as doctors monitor her progress. In addition, she is not allowed to drive, work or be in public places for the next six weeks.
“The first two months after you get out of hospital are crucial and you are monitored very closely. After the first year you are out of the worst. I am not allowed to be in crowded places at the moment, but the family will be selling the emblems [during Organ Donor Awareness Week] and I’ll continue to be involved with the Irish Kidney Association in the future.”
She is not curious to know who donated her new kidney, not at the moment anyway.
“You are not told anything about the donor. It’s up to their family to get in touch with you, but even then they only let you know what age they were and if they were male or female. You get very little information.”
I’m not really bothered, maybe I a few months I’ll want to know more.
Vienna intends to take part in the World Transplant Games in Australia next summer.
For now, she’s just focused on making a full recovery.
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