Organ donor hopes to create national registry
Mullins Family.org
by: Dwight Davis | The Dispatch
After she saved a life, she set out to change the culture. Lexingtonâs Sherry Mullies gave an organ to a coworkerâs son last fall and then took on the colossal challenge of creating the nationâs â" perhaps the worldâs â" only living-donor kidney registry.
The purpose of such an online database would be to track indefinitely the progress and offer support for those who chose to donate an organ.
âThere is no information out there concerning long-term health information of living donors,â Mullies says. âThereâs nothing that tells us about numbers or health risks. What are the risks of donors having high blood pressure, for example?â
Mullies, a 51-year-old mother of six, says she believes that data would reinforce many expert opinions that there are indeed no long-term health risks for donors and that concrete information would serve as an encouragement factor for those who may wrestle with the idea of giving up a kidney. She cites one source that states kidney donors on average live three years longer than non-donors. âOf course that has a lot to do with the screening process,â she notes.
Mullies reports that her health is good, as is that of her 38-year-old kidney recipient, Eric Ellis of Winston-Salem, who suffered from double renal failure.
Working as a business systems analyst for Blue Cross Blue Shield in Winston-Salem, Mullies has an inside track to her goal. She has campaigned for the health insurance provider to become a pioneer in the quest, and vice president Kat Gesh-Wilson is supporting her effort, Mullies said.
Through BSBC, work is under way toward a grant for the database.
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"You have the power to SAVE lives."
To register as a donor in California:
www.donateLIFEcalifornia.org | www.doneVIDAcalifornia.org
Outside California:
www.organdonor.gov | www.donatelife.net

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