How to find out more

Hey everyone, sorry I haven’t been blogging lately.  I’m healthy and still waiting for that call.  Rather than blog, I’ve been updating my Facebook page, so to stay in touch check me out over on Erica Needs A Kidney!

If you’re looking for ways to help me; my dad has set up a go fund me page which can be found here, Erica Needs A Kidney Donation Page.

If you’re considering being a donor, here is how.  Contact both transplant programs:

  • Hartford Hospital: 860-972-4219
  • Yale New Haven Hospital: 866-925-3897

And for more information on living donation, try these resources:

Experience my story  Check out the video BNK Photography made about my daughter and I and my struggle as a single mom with kidney disease.

 

 

 

Updates!

First, the video is doing amazing on social media!  It’s been viewed over 9,000 times!  If you haven’t seen it and shared it please do so.  #fightforerica  And please like BNK photography’s page.  Beth has done so much for me!  She’s an amazing person, has amazing talent and you should check her out!

Second, what the video has done has create an influx of interest in being a donor.  Hopefully if you’re interested but not a match for me, you’re still interested in being a match for others.  My story is not the only one out there.  I am not the only one struggling.  Twenty two people die daily while waiting for a transplant.  When I started this blog, the number was at 18.  This is wholly unacceptable.  That could be 22 children losing a parent every day because they were denied the gift of life.

Third, I’ve been accepted into the transplant program at Yale New Haven Hospital.  I’m currently inactive pending a visit with a hematologist, but I am listed and earning time.  I’ve just increased my chances in having a match because Yale is a bigger hospital with more resources.  They do more transplants than any hospital in CT and they do donor exchanges.  Including this one which was the longest donor chain done in CT history.  Also a larger hospital like Yale uses newer techniques, such as laparoscopic nephrectomy, which means surgery for the donor is less invasive resulting in an easier and shorter recovery.

Fourth, and my favorite update, I’ve been published!  Well an article about me has been!  A few weeks ago, maybe over a month ago, I met with a woman named Mara from a local paper, Wethersfield Life.  I had reached out to them about putting up an announcement in their paper about needing a kidney.  Like the guy who put his wife’s need on his truck, I thought an ad would have the same effect.  Turned out they thought an article would be great.  Mara and  I spoke for a while and I gave her the gist of what life has been like for the last 5 years.  The good, the bad, and the ugly.  The best part of the article is what my friend Laura says about me.  It seems that I’ve inspired her, she who is on her own transplant journey.  Her comments humbled me.  I hear people say all the time how strong and brave I am, but I don’t feel that way.  I feel like I’m just living and doing the best I can, there is nothing extraordinary about it.  http://turleyct.com/wethersfield-life/ page 25.  Please read it, share it, spread the story.  #fightforerica

#fightforerica

Years ago, seems like forever ago I joined a message board of women from all walks of life at various stages of like.  The message board has been proof that when you need people in your life they appear.  I’ve exchanged words of support with Beth, one of these amazing women, for a long time.  Beth is a photographer (visit her at BNK Photography) and recently when she offered mini sessions I scheduled one for myself and my daughter.  It took me a while to do it because I was feeling some kind of way about a family session without Juliana’s dad.  But I had a nugget of an idea to hold up a sign about needing a kidney donor like I’d seen in this article.  Since reading that I’ve been a bit obsessed with making my story go viral.  When I pitched the idea to Beth she gave me the go ahead and then took it a step further.  She pitched me an idea about a video montage.  I admit I had no idea exactly what she was going to do but I’m not creative and I sensed a type of passion in her about this.  During the shoot we talked a bit about what I’ve been through and my constant fight.

As I settled in to wait for Beth to work she surprised me by taking it a step even further and making sure that not only did I have an amazing video she made sure the world would see it.  She put what I feel, what I need into a medium that allows me to share it with the world.  She’s given me a way to make people listen.

So here is one of the things I’ve been waiting to share with you.  This is MY fight song.  #fightforerica #myfightsong #bethespark

MY FIGHT SONG

PS – Thank you Beth.  Thank you doesn’t seem to be enough.  You freaking rock.

Good things happen to those who wait.

Good things are coming down the pike.  I’m not revealing what exactly, but I will soon.  It’s not my actual kidney, but I think the result of these things will be my kidney.

I need to reiterate how truly blessed I am to have such a huge support system.  From strangers to family to friends people step up and lend a hand in many ways, often in ways I don’t know I need.  On this journey I’ve learned to be stronger but I’ve also learned to borrow strength from others.  I often try to go it alone but thats stupid.  A fight like this needs an army of many, not just one.

I say all this to say thank you for fighting with me and to stay tuned.  Good stuff, no amazing stuff to follow.

The hardest part

You’re probably thinking I’m going to talk about doing dialysis at home.  About how hard it is for me to stick a needle in my arm twice daily.  And the truth is, it sucks the first few times you do it, but once the button holes develop it doesn’t hurt as much.  Needle sticking is just part of the process.  The hardest part of being in renal failure is by far the diet.

A nephrologist I met during the transplant eval put it best.  If it taste good, you can’t have it.  Food can cause the destruction of a dialysis’ patients fragile health quicker than skipping treatment.  The kicker is that it’s the stuff that’s good for you that causes the biggest issue.  Good minerals like phosphorus, potassium and calcium that we are encouraged to include in our diet when our kidney’s work are now the enemy.  To avoid potassium you have to limit potassium rich foods like leafy greens and citrus.  To avoid too much calcium you have to limit dairy, that one is particularly difficult to watch because your dialysate, the fluid used to clean your blood is mostly calcium.  And phosphorus is literally in everything.  Especially dairy.  What is my kryptonite?  CHEESE.  I puffy heart cheese and now it’s my mortal enemy.  I hope you’re weeping for me because I deserve your sympathy!

So in my never ending battle against my lab results, I’ve zeroed in the one I have the hardest time with.  Phosphorus.  My levels should be no higher than 5.5 and mine usually rolls in around 10.  Blah.  It’s truly a battle and I don’t even want to win, I mostly want to just slide off the battle field in tact.  Maybe a bit bloody, missing a limb or two etc.  I’d be happy with being around a 6.  To combat phosphorus you take a binder, most binders make me vomit uncontrollably.  Which actually works because phosphorus can’t bother you if you’re not eating amIright?  But you do need protein and you get that from eating.  I did manage to find a binder that only caused GI issues but still the food you eat is a major component and if you didn’t guess by now, I love cheese.  So, my latest attempt is a 28 day clean eating challenge.  I’m not trying to lose weight, just eliminate the bad foods.  Potatoes, cheese, milk, yogurt, wheat.  I’ve replaced milk with almond milk and rice milk which have a negligible phosphorus level.  Pasta has been exchanged for brown rice pasta which isn’t great but isn’t bad.  I even tried dairy free cheese.  Tried.  Did not enjoy but tried.

Bottom line, I hate giving up things.   I struggle to quit anything permanently.  I feel like having slight indulgences are what keeps life interesting.  I don’t binge watch on Netflix every week, but every so often it’s nice to lay in bed or on the couch for two days.  I don’t eat ice cream daily but to finish of a pint of Americone Dream one a year?  It’s nice!  Thats why this part of being an ESRD patient is hard.  You’re not supposed to indulge.  The idea of treating yourself is forbidden because it could really harm your body.  So for me, who used to list eating a hobby food isn’t as fun as it used to be.

Two Years.

It’s been two years, give or take a month or so, since I last wrote a post.

I didn’t die obviously and I wasn’t overly sick.  I did end up in the hospital again in 2014 thanks to a raging lung infection.  But the major thing that happened that made me stop writing was my husband left.  And I didn’t want to write about that.  But I had nothing else to write about so I just didn’t write.  I still don’t want to write about it.  We’re divorced.  The end.  That’s all I have to say about that.  Now you know and we can move forward.

Here’s another update.  I still need a kidney.  Now this, I can write about.  In the last two years I had a couple of donor close calls.  Donor’s that were a match and backed out at the last minute.  I’m not too angry about it.  Don’t get me wrong, it pissed me off.  But surgery is a big deal and I feel like if it doesn’t work for you, then it doesn’t work with me.  Because I’ve been wasting away on the list waiting I at times feel the need to get this ship in gear.  What can I do to generate a kidney?!

Thing one; I signed up on matching donors.com.  It’s a site that connects willing living donors with patients looking for a transplant.  As long as you don’t buy into the sites tagline about getting a kidney in 6 months you’re good.  I’ve been on it for about a year and yep, still waiting.

Thing two; Attempting to cross list at Yale which is known to be a better program than Hartford Hospital.  They do more transplants, do more transplant chains, they just do more and move quicker.  They are still waiting for records from Hartford Hospital, but I’m hoping to be listed soon.

Thing three; I’ve been active on Hartford’s list for over a year.  They tell me I’m in the top 25% of the list which means I really could receive a call at any time.  Thus I need to be prepared for surgery which I of course am not.  Because, well.  I’m a single mom now.  I live on my own with only the peanut and when you transplant you can’t live on your own with just a peanut.  My lovely friend Shannon set up a crowd fund page for me in hopes to raise money to hire people to cook and clean for me.  And the meds, whoa the meds.  So expensive.  It’s my hope that by the time my time comes I will be ready to go.  Help fund my fight!  https://www.gofundme.com/2zcjf9z

Thing four; I can start writing again.  I do a bit on my Facebook page, but I can and should do more.  It’s just sometimes I only have angry words and I feel like I don’t want to share only angry words.  But I should be angry.  People die every day because they need a kidney and people in the world don’t need 2.  You only need one.  And yes, I know surgery is a big deal.  But people get boob jobs and nose jobs and liposuction which have way more side effects and a harder recovery because they don’t like how they look in the mirror.  And you won’t consider saving someone’s life?!  What a self centered world.  Let me look better while people die because I don’t want to talk about being a donor.

Thing five; I can talk about it.  I can have tons of conversations and keep talking about it until someone talks back.

I won’t be posting every day. I’m going to avoid giving myself goals or rules about the site.  If I feel like talking I’ll talk.  I’ll cross post cool articles that I see and keep reminding you about my go fund me page.  And you can keep up with me on Facebook, Erica Needs a Kidney.

Erica needs a kidney but not a fever

Or a 14.5cm cyst, pseudo cyst in her body attached to her pancreas Martin, is drained now and may whatever nastiness he had in him be found out and told to me in the morning. I’m sick of sweating through fevers every night and while he certainly was causing them my biggest fear is he’s causing pancreatitis, which btdt and ugh. That will screw a month up. So far I don’t feel feverish and my surgeon did say its normally outpatietient (I was already in) so per chance I will be just fine? We will see when we view the autopsy but tonight I feel ok.

I have fallen through the cracks.

So when you’re waiting for a transplant, you’re pretty much part of a team. You have your nephrologist who enters you into the program, a coordinator who helps to make sure you’re physically ready for transplant, a financial counselor who makes sure your insurance and paperwork are in order, a nutritionist who makes sure your weight and diet are on track, a social worker who keeps the cray cray in check and a surgeon who is going to do the slicing and dicing. With a team you should be covered from soup to nuts.

I got a great response from my family letter. Not only did I have a few cousins who decided to be tested, a very good friend of mine stepped up to the plate as well. They all called into the program and none of them have heard back.

Say what now?

All three who decided to be tested are blood matches (they all have O’s) and none have heard back from the program.

YES, you heard me correctly the first time.

So what gives with that? I’m an O, they are an O, and they may all be matches depending on our antibodies, so why am I typing this from work and not recovery. Because the Hartford Hospital Transplant Program isn’t calling any of us back. Let me share with you this brief timeline of recent events. Maybe you’ll find some sort of answer in the craziness.

On 4/1, I received a call from the surgeon asking if I was still on prednisone or was I ready for transplant. She said she’d been asked to find out because of my donor. I replied I knew nothing about a donor, but updated her on my current meds. When I pressed her for information on the donor, she said she shouldn’t have mentioned it and to not talk about it (aka don’t get your hopes up).

On 4/18, I received a call from the transplant program telling me of blood work and tests outstanding. Wasn’t told how this relates to current status or to potential donors. Completed blood work and scheduled outstanding exam.

On 4/29, called transplant to report completed exam and inquire on status and potential donors, told that coordinator was unavailable but would call me back; (actually told that the message would be HAND DELIVERED to my coordinator).

On 5/5, spoke with my cousin who called transplant program in January to inquire about testing. His blood type is O, thinks he could be a potential match; he has gotten several vials of blood drawn, has not heard of any result.

On 5/6, called transplant to report completed ob exam and inquire on status and potential donors, told that my coordinator is no longer employed with the program and at current time they do not know who is handling my case.

Based on that it’s plain to see that I’ve fallen through the cracks; this craziness has been going on for over a month with no real resolution on the horizon BECAUSE THEY WON’T CALL ME BACK. If it were a typical customer service situation I would have asked for their manager, posted on their facebook page and their twitter. But I feel like I shouldn’t have to. This is what they do; they should be on top of this. Three potential donors and NOTHING?!? It’s not like my life is at stake here. I can hang out on dialysis indefinitely. I don’t have a life to live, a four and a half year old and a husband to take care of. I didn’t really need a kidney transplant; it’s just something I decided I wanted because all the cool kids are doing it. Thank you Hartford Hospital for being the best partner a girl with dead kidneys could ask for.

A Plea To My Family

Today I end my self imposed blog writing hiatus to let you know I wrote a letter.

I wrote a letter to my family because enough is enough. I’m not sure if I’ve been open enough with them about the struggle that is my daily life, so I dropped my façade of “everything’s great” and wrote to them. So far it’s gone out by email. Tonight it will go on my facebook page and tomorrow out by snail mail. And right now it’s here for the web to read.

Enjoy.

A quick note, the "attachments" mentioned in the letter are a faq and assorted information from the following websites. Please follow the links to also read the information shared with the letter’s recipients.

http://donatelife.net/understanding-donation/living-donation/

http://www.kidney.org/transplantation/livingdonors/index.cfm

A letter to Erica McGregor’s Family:

“More than 113,000 people are on the transplant wait list. Every 12 minutes someone new is added. Every day, 18 people DIE while waiting”.

I don’t want to be one of the 18 who die today.

I have written this in my head so many times, but never had it in me to write it out for you to read. You all know me; I speak up at times, but rarely on my own behalf. I have kept quiet about the one thing that I should not, and that is my health situation. I think all of you know that I have Lupus. I think all of you know that I also have End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) because of Lupus. Some of you may or may not know that I am on Dialysis because of ESRD, and none of you know that all of this is causing serious Heart issues. What you all need to know now is, my life is at stake, and I will die if I do not receive a Kidney Transplant.

I’m sure this sounds dramatic to you. Because really, the last time you saw me you probably though I looked great. In fact the last time I saw some of you, you told me I looked great! I’ve lost about 50lbs and yes I do not look sick at all. Plus, I’m on dialysis, so that helps right? I’m sure you have told yourself that I am ok, because at the base of things, this appears to be true. But the reality is I’m extremely sick and dialysis is not a cure for ESRD. It’s meant to be temporary, and while I could stay on it indefinitely, it’s eventually going to stop working and has already started to cause other parts of my body to not work properly, namely my heart. Also, the costs, monetary, physical and emotional are huge.

Dialysis costs my family and I over 100K a year. Some of that cost is covered by insurance. Some is covered by Medicare. I only get coverage for 36 months. After 36 months, with no kidney transplant, the costs need to be 100% covered by Asher and me. I’ve been on dialysis now since November 2011. That’s 15 months so far, 23 left to go. My dialysis prescription requires me to have dialysis five days a week. Because I work full time, my day goes like this; I wake up at 7:00am and start work at 8:30am. I work until 4:30/5:00 pm, go home make dinner for my family, set up the dialysis machine, start dialysis between 5:30 and 6:00 pm, treatment takes about 3 hours (3.5 hours including setup), I end treatment between 8:30/9:00pm, I eat dinner (if I feel up to it), talk to Asher (if I feel up to it) and then go to bed, so that I can be up the next morning at 7am, and start all over again. Two days a week Juliana spends the evening with a sitter so that I can start treatment at a reasonable hour. The other days during the week, on nights when we don’t have a sitter, I don’t get on the machine until Juliana’s bed time, which means I’m typically up until close to midnight doing treatment. I rarely have time to actually eat the dinner I make; I spend minimal time with Juliana, and very rarely get to spend time with Asher, all because every night I have to do dialysis. And I have to do this 5 times a week. That is close to 20 hours of dialysis. So not only am I working a 40 hour week, being a mom and a wife, I spend 20 hours, the equivalent of a part time job, on a dialysis machine.

A dialysis machine is also known an Artificial Kidney; it does the work that your kidneys typically do. And because it is a machine, it’s extremely effective. It not only cleans the waste from your body, it strips your body of necessary vitamins and minerals. It also strips your body of white and red blood cells, the things that fight infection and keep you healthy. Every treatment I have to inject myself with a medication called Epogen because my body cannot make the amount of red blood cells it needs. My hemoglobin count is so low, that without the Epogen I’d be hospitalized for a blood transfusion every week.

On a good night, dialysis is tolerable. On a bad night, my blood pressure drops to dangerous levels and I become nauseated. Sometimes I vomit, sometimes I pass out, and sometimes so much fluid is removed from my body that my feet and hands cramp and I can’t move my fingers or toes. But I endure it because life is hard, and for now this is the only way that I can make it to the next day. Without the dialysis machine, the toxins typically cleaned out of the body would build up. I would start with feeling exhausted, then I’d have a fever, feel queasy, and slowly the rest of my organs would stop working. I live for dialysis, and need dialysis to live; it’s a never ending cycle.

As one of my family members, the odds that our blood types are compatible are high. As one of my family members, the chances of me living with your kidney are even higher. Family is always the best match. And kidneys from living donors have the longest transplant life, meaning a kidney from you is most likely the only one I’d ever need.

This is why I’m writing to you. I need your help. I need your help because you are my best chance for a kidney transplant. I like to think that maybe the reason why you haven’t been tested yet is because you just don’t know how bad things are. That you saw me and I looked good and you just did not know. Or maybe the reason you haven’t been tested is because you’re scared, or because you simply don’t know the process and don’t know how to get started. Maybe you worry about the cost and time needed. Today, in this letter, I am sharing with you everything. And if you have questions, and want to know the process, just ask me. Talk to me about the process, talk to me about what I’m going through. I understand that what I am asking is a lot. But if the roles were reversed and I could do it for you I would. I would not hesitate to save your life because you have daughters, sons, wives, husbands, nephews and nieces who want you to be with them as long as humanly possible. And I want to be with you, my family as long as possible. I believe in God and that with Him all things are possible, but I also believe in action, and right now I need you to act on my behalf.

Step one in the process is to contact the Hartford Hospital Transplant Program. They can be found on the web at http://www.harthosp.org/transplant/KidneyTransplantation/default.aspx and contacted via phone at (860) 972-4219. Tell them that you are interested in being a Living Donor for Erica McGregor. They have a living donor coordinator who can help you through the process. I won’t lie to you, it’s a long process that involves blood tests, medical exams and will require time off from work and just time in general. I know how precious time is, trust me, but this is very worth it.

Attached to this email are two documents that will help you make your decision. They cover the costs, all steps of the process and answer any basic questions you might have. I am always available to answer any questions you have as well.

Thank you for taking the time to read my words, I love you all.

Erica