Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

‘It’s going to save so many more lives’

From this week, a new law requires people to opt out of becoming organ donors. Oliver Kemp spoke to a paramedic whose life was saved by a liver donation.

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A Kent paramedic was forced to face an awful reality after being told she would die without an emergency liver transplant. Doctors told Catherine Foadsmith that complicati­ons surroundin­g her chronic liver disease would kill her without the life-saving operation.

The 35-year-old said: “I was told that I was going into hospital either until I died or got a transplant.

“It was terrifying and it wasn’t as well publicised as it is now so I didn’t have a clue what was going to happen or how long it could take.”

Having been diagnosed with autoimmune hepatitis at the age of 18, Ms Foad-smith suffered with low immunity and had keep a close eye on her health. But after falling ill with a cold in December 2015, her health quickly declined and her liver went into complete failure.

She said: “It hadn’t really sunk in, but then I told my dad I needed to go on the transplant list and that’s when it really hit me.”

Luckily for the paramedic, she did not have to wait a long time for the transplant team to find her a donor. In May 2016, she got the call that a donor was available.

She had the life-saving operation the next day.

She said: “I’m one of the absolutely lucky ones, I waited four-and-a-half months which is nothing in the grand scheme of things.”

Ms Foad-smith’s liver donor was alive but on life support and although donors are kept anonymous the service allows recipients to send a letter to the family.

Feeling so grateful to the donor that saved her life, she decided she would write to the family to express her gratitude.

She said: “It took me six months to write the letter – it was an incredibly hard letter to write but I’m glad I did it. “Without the transplant system I wouldn’t be here.” Ms Foad-smith, of Dane Park, Margate, is now a qualified paramedic working for the South East Coast Ambulance Service but is self-quarantini­ng due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Although she was lucky enough to have been found a donor quickly, the fate of many others across the county is much worse due to a shortage of available donations. There are more than 6,000 people who are currently waiting for an organ in the UK and three people on the waiting list die everyday.

To combat this, the law is changing to try and support more people in desperate need of a transplant.

‘If you’re willing to take an organ, you should be equally happy to give one’

From yesterday (Wednesday), all adults in England will be considered for organ donation unless they have opted out or are part of an excluded group. Previously you had to opt in to register yourself as a potential donor but it is hoped the new system will make transplant organs more readily and quickly available.

The Organ Donation Act is known as Max and Keira’s law, in honour of a boy who received a heart transplant and the girl who donated it.

Ms Foad-smith hopes the law change will mean more people will get the help she received and hopes people will think carefully if they are considerin­g opting out.

She said: “If you’re willing to take one, you should be equally happy to give one.

“How would you feel if it was your mum, your daughter or friend who needed a transplant? “It’s going to give so many more people a second chance.”

 ??  ?? Paramedic Catherine Foad-smith, whose life was saved as a result of getting a quick transplant, has welcomed a change in the law concerning organ donations
Paramedic Catherine Foad-smith, whose life was saved as a result of getting a quick transplant, has welcomed a change in the law concerning organ donations

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