Sunday Territorian

Give gift of life

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TODAY is the final day of Donate Life Week, a campaign urging Australian­s to register to become organ and tissue donors, and encourage friends and family to do the same.

For many readers, this week may be the first time you have thought about donating an organ, or considered discussing the issue with loved ones.

In the Northern Territory in 2018, fewer than 13 per cent of people were registered on the Australian Organ Donor register. For me, it is an issue I am acutely aware of and live with every day.

This week in the Senate, I intended to speak about kidney disease and the high need for organ transplant­s in the NT. As a federal senator for the Northern Territory, I know I am in a privileged position to be able to draw attention to issues which might not otherwise receive the attention they deserve. It’s why I do this job: to help make a difference.

Instead, I write this from a hospital bed in Canberra as I recover from a flare-up of my own kidney disease that has left me in pain.

The disease I live with is polycystic kidney disease or PKD, a lifelong genetic disease that worsens over time as fluid-filled cysts form and enlarge both kidneys. There is no cure.

The discomfort and often pain that comes with PKD is frequent for me. But I believe I can be a voice for other sufferers of kidney disease and in particular, Territoria­ns desperatel­y needing organ donations.

The ultimate destinatio­n for PKD is renal dialysis or a kidney transplant, so campaigns like Donate Life are immensely important and immensely personal to me.

Registerin­g to become an organ donor makes a huge difference to the lives of patients and their families. It is an extraordin­ary act of generosity to give the gift of life.

Like many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, I have seen multiple family members affected by renal disease end up on dialysis far from home.

My beautiful mum struggled most of her adult life with kidney disease, as well as other health complicati­ons like rheumatic heart disease and lupus. She died after several years of dialysis treatment, her chances of a kidney transplant pretty much zero.

Esteemed kidney specialist Dr Paul Lawton, now with the Menzies School of Health Research, monitored Mum’s condition in her final years of life as she endured renal treatment far from home in Darwin.

Dr Lawton now monitors mine. He also works with the clinician who first identified my PKD while I was working as a journalist for NITV/SBS in Sydney prior.

My youngest brother, just 40 years old, has had to move from Borroloola to Darwin for three months to begin dialysis.

His adult daughters are learning how to do haemodialy­sis to assist him when he returns home. His wife drives the nearly 1000km every weekend to see him and then returns to her job in Borroloola.

Once he is able to return home, my brother will be in a fortunate position in comparison to many. Nationally, only 12 per cent of indigenous people on dialysis get treatment at home, compared to 21 per cent of non-indigenous people.

Many indigenous people from remote communitie­s will end up on dialysis in Darwin or Alice Springs – far from family, community and homelands.

Treatment is required for at least four hours, three days a week for the rest of their life. Making a return journey home for the weekend is unlikely, and the chances of maintainin­g a job impossible. Because of this, people requiring dialysis might ultimately make the tough decision to quit treatment and return home to live their final days on country.

Seeing family members on dialysis, and then passing away from complicati­ons of kidney disease, is a heart-wrenching personal problem.

Indigenous Australian­s nationally are seven times more likely than non-indigenous to need dialysis or a transplant.

Of the 750-800 patients on dialysis in the Northern Territory, roughly 90 per cent are indigenous and of those, threequart­ers come from remote communitie­s.

It is a disease rooted in poverty, often starting before birth, with nutrition issues in the mother affecting kidney developmen­t in utero. The lack of affordable nutritious food in remote communitie­s, poor education on healthy living, overcrowdi­ng and poor health hardware such as running water for bathing are all factors leading to kidney disease.

Yet of the more than 1000 Australian­s who receive a new kidney each year, fewer than 40 are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander. The number of indigenous people getting transplant­s should be much higher.

I would like to express a heartfelt thank you to those people, and their families who have donated kidneys and changed the lives of people needing a transplant.

This weekend is the 12th anniversar­y of my mum’s death. I am proud to say I have inherited her resilience and determinat­ion to do the best I can for others who also suffer from renal disease.

Please, talk to your families this Donate Life Week, register at Donatelife.org.au and support organisati­ons like Herd of Hope, which supports patients in rural and regional areas requiring organ donation.

Senator Malarndirr­i McCarthy is a Yanyuwa woman from the Gulf country and federal Labor Senator for the Northern Territory.

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