Town of Tonawanda police officer awaiting heart transplant savors home life
The Buffalo News | Anne Neville
Town of Tonawanda Police Officer Tim Day explains the battery pack for the mechanical heart pump that works part of his heart as his wife, Sherry, looks on. Photo gallery at BuffaloNews.com. Sharon Cantillon/Buffalo News
Itâs a typical hectic summer day for a family with three young children.
An aunt goes to pick up Clare, 6, from day camp. Erin, 9, sprawls on the couch with a âDespicable Meâ game, and Henry, 4, changes for a swim lesson.
For Tim Day, the childrenâs father and an officer with the Town of Tonawanda Police Department, who is watching all this from a seat at the dining room table, the hubbub of family life is close to paradise.
Day, 45, is at home in Kenmore with an implanted heart pump after spending 128 days in Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, awaiting a transplant to replace his heart, which was ravaged by an autoimmune disease.
He never got that transplant, but he has stabilized enough, at least for now, to wait for a new heart at home.
Doctors are hoping he will stay high on the transplant list because his first implanted pump failed due to blood clots. That failure and a severe infection in early May led to some harrowing moments.
Town of Tonawanda Police Officer Tim Day explains the battery pack for the mechanical heart pump that works part of his heart as his wife, Sherry, looks on. Photo gallery at BuffaloNews.com. Sharon Cantillon/Buffalo News
An aunt goes to pick up Clare, 6, from day camp. Erin, 9, sprawls on the couch with a âDespicable Meâ game, and Henry, 4, changes for a swim lesson.
For Tim Day, the childrenâs father and an officer with the Town of Tonawanda Police Department, who is watching all this from a seat at the dining room table, the hubbub of family life is close to paradise.
Day, 45, is at home in Kenmore with an implanted heart pump after spending 128 days in Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, awaiting a transplant to replace his heart, which was ravaged by an autoimmune disease.
He never got that transplant, but he has stabilized enough, at least for now, to wait for a new heart at home.
Doctors are hoping he will stay high on the transplant list because his first implanted pump failed due to blood clots. That failure and a severe infection in early May led to some harrowing moments.
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