The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Transplant patients, families find housing

Joy Echols (left) and ailing son Ross are in an apartment courtesy of the Jeffrey Campbell Evans Foundation.

- By Nancy Badertsche­r

Joy Echols never imagined she would leave her home in rural South Georgia and be living in Atlanta while waiting with her son for his double lung transplant.

Her son, Ross, now 25, had been seriously ill as a baby, and doctors warned that he could see repercussi­ons from that in his early 20s. But that did not lessen the shock when Ross had to go on oxygen full time last Christmas or when doctors told his mother he needed a transplant within a year.

Joy knew she had to be with the youngest of her three children through the wait for a donor, the surgery, and the recovery, and — with help from the Jeffrey Campbell Evans Foundation — she is.

Since late June, Joy Echols and Ross have been living in one of six, fully furnished apartments that the foundation has in Atlanta for transplant patients and family members. “It’s our home-awayfrom-home while we are pre-transplant and post-transplant,” Joy Echols said. “There’s nothing that we have needed that’s not here.”

About 80 transplant patients and their family members have stayed in one of the foundation’s two-bedroom, twobath apartments since 2017. The length of their stays is usually a month or two, but have ranged from a couple of weeks to seven months.

Most families qualify to have their rent paid by a donor, usually the Georgia Transplant Foundation. People with the ability to pay are charged less than the average daily hotel rates in Atlanta.

Seattle natives Bob and Mary Evans started the foundation in 2015 as a way to bring meaning to the death of their son, Jeffrey “Jeff ” Evans.

Jeff, a 4-star Atlanta chef, became ill with flulike symptoms in 2003 after volunteeri­ng to cook at a large charity event in South Georgia. A few days later, X-rays revealed that his heart was large — roughly the size of a small soccer ball — and that an unknown virus had destroyed 80% of his heart’s function. Jeff was on the waiting list for a transplant for three years and was even prepped for surgery once, but the donor’s heart was not viable. He died Aug. 8, 2006, at age 26.

Mary Evans said she was sitting at her kitchen table one morning several years later and said: “God, you have to tell me how to make sense of losing my Jeff because to his mom, none of this makes sense.”

It was then that she said she came up with the idea of building a transplant house in son Jeff ’s memory, although she, husband Bob, and son Brad later decided it was better to start smaller, with apartments.

All of the apartments are within three miles of one of Atlanta’s major transplant hospitals — Emory University Hospital, Piedmont Hospital or Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Each comes fully furnished thanks to donors, such as Mike Hall, owner of Georgia Furniture Mart in Norcross. When Hall heard about the foundation’s mission, “my heartstrin­gs jerked,” he said. “We’ve been really blessed, and we’ve been seeking opportunit­ies to give back ...”

Hall is furnishing a seventh foundation apartment — except for the kitchen — that opens in mid-August.

Cynthia Elery of Powder Springs stayed in one of the foundation’s apartments while her husband, Lawrence, was having a double lung transplant in April 2018.

The spacious apartments do so much for families and the caregiver by creating a relaxed atmosphere where they can eat, talk, play and relax, she said.

“It gives the family the opportunit­y to be back together as one unit and give that family love we are accustomed to, and that helps the patient to heal even more,” said Elery, now a foundation board member.

Mary Evans still plans to make that dream of a transplant house happen — and not just here but also in 38 other states. A local architect has drawn up, at no charge, an elaborate design for 20 two-bedroom, two-bath units and amenities that include a gym, game room, audio-visual room, reading room, living room, and chapel. Fundraisin­g for the project is set to begin early next year.

“My passion in life is the caregiver and the emotional, financial and other burdens they have. It’s a very hard road to travel — a roller coaster ride that’s just up and down,” Mary Evans said. “I always tell them I will do anything for them to try to make this journey a little easier. I know Jeff is just pleased as punch.”

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 ?? PHIL SKINNER / FOR THE AJC ?? Joy Echols and son Ross walk in the garden behind the apartment where they wait for his double lung transplant at Emory. Patients and families often spend days, weeks or even months near where the transplant takes place.
PHIL SKINNER / FOR THE AJC Joy Echols and son Ross walk in the garden behind the apartment where they wait for his double lung transplant at Emory. Patients and families often spend days, weeks or even months near where the transplant takes place.
 ?? AJC STAFF 2013 ?? The apartments create a relaxed atmosphere where patients and caregivers can eat, talk, read, write and relax while they wait.
AJC STAFF 2013 The apartments create a relaxed atmosphere where patients and caregivers can eat, talk, read, write and relax while they wait.

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