Doris Thomas和OSF Mission Partners三十年后

First OSF Saint Francis heart transplant recipient glad to see program returning

It’s been almost 32 years, but Doris Thomas still remembers exactly what she was doing at 2:40 a.m. April 27, 1987. She’ll never forget that moment. She had just been woken up by the ringing of her phone. It was the call she had been waiting for. She was about to become the first person to have a heart transplant performed atOSF HealthCare Saint Francis Medical Center.

Doris, of Marseilles, was 55 years old at the time. She was suffering fromcongestive heart failureand had been on theheart transplantlist since February. When she got the call that there was a heart waiting for her, her family took her immediately to Peoria for surgery.

在手术的时候,她被告知她还可以再活10年,但她很久以前就超过了这个时间线。从心脏移植到今天的32年里,生活发生了很多变化,多丽丝很感激这份礼物,它让她有更多时间和家人在一起。

“I raised my grandson, who is 28. I got to see a bunch of new grandkids. I’m just thankful to be here,” Doris said. “If it wasn’t for my new heart, I wouldn’t be here. It gave me a second chance at life.”

Bringing back second chances

Doris Thomas in cardiac rehabilitation following heart transplant

Carol Linett and Carol Koch assist Doris Thomas with cardiac rehabilitation following her heart transplant in 1987.

OSF圣弗朗西斯是心脏移植项目的所在地,该项目始于1987年多丽丝的病例,由于患者数量减少和医生退休,于2006年结束。在19年的运行中,该项目成功完成了197例心脏移植手术。

Now, the program is making acomeback. In January, the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board approved the hospital’s certificate of need application to re-establish theheart transplant program, which OSF HealthCare leadership said could take up to 18 months to complete.

As the first person to ever receive a transplanted heart at OSF Saint Francis, Doris stands as a testament to the powerful impact of organ transplantation and the importance of re-establishing the OSF Saint Francis program.

With heart failure cases expected to rise in coming decades, OSF Saint Francis will offer the only heart transplant program in central and downstate Illinois. It will be a destination center for both transplants and ventricular assist device procedures (VAD), offering patients in the area a second chance tocelebrate the gift of life.

“There’s a big void of an area where this service isn’t available unless you go to a big city. It’s hard on families,” saidDr. Barry Clemson, who oversees heart failure treatment throughoutOSF HealthCare. “They have expenses. Maybe they don’t know anybody. If they’re from a small town, they might be very uncomfortable in a big city.”

Doris said she is glad the program is coming back. The heart transplant give her more than 30 years she wouldn’t have had otherwise to spend with family, and she fondly recalls the people who cared for her during the seven weeks she spent recovering at the hospital.

“I would recommend to anybody, if they need a heart, they should go to OSF Saint Francis,” Doris said. “I was there seven weeks and I was treated great. Every day the nurses and the doctor, they came in and talked with me. I was never alone. There was always someone there with me. I was asked if I wanted to do it at another hospital, but I wanted to come here because of the great care.”

About Author:Ken Harris

Ken Harris is the proudest father and a writing coordinator for the Marketing & Communications division of OSF HealthCare.

He has a bachelor's in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and worked as a daily newspaper reporter for four years before leaving the field and eventually finding his way to OSF HealthCare.

In his free time, Ken likes reading, fly fishing, hanging out with his dog and generally pestering his lovely, patient wife.

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Categories:Heart Health,Patient Stories