Father gave daughter gift of life through transplant
WWLTV | Bill Capo
NEW ORLEANS -- Rachel White just turned 22, and looks like she has barely ever suffered from a cold, much less come close to dying. Yet she is alive today because of two liver transplants.
"I am one of a million, and I know that, and I always used to hear it back in the day, and I was like, oh yeah, miracle child, like yay,â she said.
Rachel is doing so well she doesn't even need to take special drugs to stop her body from rejecting the donated organ.
"I feel good,â she said. âI've always just felt like every normal kid, really, just with a really big scar that's great for show and tell."
Her father, Bruce White, said, "Now we're just thrilled with college student, and off all of her medicines, and just going forward day after day."
But 20 years ago, while little Rachel had a charming smile, she was dying. Her liver had failed while she was a toddler, the poisons building up in her body colored her skin a bright yellowish-green.
It would take two liver transplants to save her. The first one came from her father, who donated a segment of his liver to save his daughter in 1993.
NEW ORLEANS -- Rachel White just turned 22, and looks like she has barely ever suffered from a cold, much less come close to dying. Yet she is alive today because of two liver transplants.
"I am one of a million, and I know that, and I always used to hear it back in the day, and I was like, oh yeah, miracle child, like yay,â she said.
Rachel is doing so well she doesn't even need to take special drugs to stop her body from rejecting the donated organ.
"I feel good,â she said. âI've always just felt like every normal kid, really, just with a really big scar that's great for show and tell."
Her father, Bruce White, said, "Now we're just thrilled with college student, and off all of her medicines, and just going forward day after day."
But 20 years ago, while little Rachel had a charming smile, she was dying. Her liver had failed while she was a toddler, the poisons building up in her body colored her skin a bright yellowish-green.
It would take two liver transplants to save her. The first one came from her father, who donated a segment of his liver to save his daughter in 1993.
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