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Kentucky organ donor affiliates opens new campus in Jeffersontown

Kentucky organ donor affiliates opens new campus in Jeffersontown © Provided by WLKY Louisville koda For the first time, three Kentucky organizations dedicated to organ and tissue donation have come together to create one campus in Louisville. The Kentucky Organ Donor Affiliates, Trust For Life, and the Kentucky Lions Eye Bank have all moved into a new building, creating the Donate Life Campus.Sign up for our Newsletters This allows us to have more collaboration, more innovation to work with the three major nonprofits dedicated to this mission in our state. So, that s the Kentucky Lion s Eye Bank, The Kentucky Circuit Clerk s Trust For Life and Kentucky Organ Donor Affiliates, said Shelly Snyder, the executive director for Trust For Life and KODA President of Strategic Partnerships.

Editorial Roundup: Kentucky

Editorial Roundup: Kentucky Recent editorials from Kentucky newspapers: The State Journal on organ and tissue donations: At last week’s Kiwanis Club of Frankfort virtual meeting, a Kentucky mother shared the touching story of the 18-month wait she and her family endured while her young son, Jacob, who was diagnosed with restrictive cardiomyopathy, was on the list for a lifesaving heart transplant. Sarah Gilbert’s family never got the phone call that a heart was available and Jacob passed away at 4 years old on Sept. 14, 2012. Oftentimes we hear about those who receive organ and tissue transplants in time to save their lives, but stories like Jacob’s are far too common.

Kentucky man credits lung transplant with saving his life after contracting COVID

Kentucky man credits lung transplant with saving his life after contracting COVID Olsen discovered through seeking treatment his new lungs were strong enough for him to heal outside the hospital. Kentucky man credits lung transplant with saving his life after contracting COVID By Stephen Goin | April 16, 2021 at 6:26 PM EDT - Updated April 17 at 5:42 PM LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WAVE) - After a double lung transplant, a Louisville man is crediting the process for saving his life after he got COVID-19. Speaking to WAVE 3 News, Mike Olsen said he was diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis in 2014 and required a lung transplant five years later; he received the organ from an anonymous donor.

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