The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Organ donors

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“There was no blood relationsh­ip. It was a step of faith that I put my name in the hat.”

There were a battery of tests to make sure they were a match and that the organ would not be rejected.

It was a perfect match, said Nuce, almost like the two were siblings.

There were more than 41,000 transplant­s in the U.S. in 2021. Of those, approximat­ely 6,500 were living donor transplant­s, up 14.2% from the previous year, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing.

Kidney and liver transplant­s are the most common.

And the waitlist is long. The number of people on the national waitlist for a kidney is more than 90,000, according to UNOS.

“There’s a stigma out there that if you donate your kidney you might not be able to do the things that you used to do before,”

said Michael Lollo, president of the National Kidney Donation Organizati­on and who donated a kidney to a stranger. “We want to dispel that myth and encourage more people to be living organ donors.”

Now Nuce hopes the Kilimanjar­o expedition will encourage others to donate.

Nuce was healthy and active before the procedure, which has just left a 3-inch scar on her abdomen. She still plays competitiv­e tennis, she hikes, paddleboar­ds and kickboxes. Her biggest fear about donating was that she “wouldn’t be the same.”

She found others online who had donated a kidney and realized they could be the biggest advocates for organ donation.

Bobby Mclaughlin, who is based in Seattle and is president of Kidney Donor Athletes, said the group is made up of 21 people from the United States and one from Canada.

The idea grew out of a virtual Yahtzee tournament among a group of kidney

donors that was held during the early onset of the pandemic.

During happy hour, the subject of scaling Mount Kilimanjar­o was hatched after one person shared that she and her husband planned to summit on a future trip.

“We aren’t profession­al athletes, just normal people who move our bodies to improve our health and we all donated a kidney,” said Mclaughlin, who donated to a stranger in 2019. So far the group has raised more than $150,000 through Gofundme.

The goal of the fundraisin­g campaign is to launch programs and initiative­s in the group’s three-year strategic plan of advocacy, awareness and education.

The climb begins Friday and people can follow their journey on Facebook.

Annabelle’s mother, Heather Whitaker, who lives in Middle Georgia said her daughter is doing well.

“I think it’s the best billboard to get the word out that a donor’s life can be successful and a blessing.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Natalie Nuce and Sabi have hiked more than 250 miles on various outings as Nuce prepares to scale Mount Kilimanjar­o.
COURTESY Natalie Nuce and Sabi have hiked more than 250 miles on various outings as Nuce prepares to scale Mount Kilimanjar­o.

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