By Lethbridge Herald on November 4, 2020.
Dale Woodard
Lethbridge Herald
Rhonda Dawes simply wanted to give someone a better 2020.
So she gave a bit of herself.
Dawes recently returned to Lethbridge following surgery to donate a kidney to an anonymous recipient last month.
With the COVID-19 pandemic that has made it a tough year, the time was now for Dawes to give someone such a crucial gift.
âI really wanted it done because 2020 has been such a crappy year,â said Dawes. âFor me, I canât imagine living in 2020 when you have an illness like kidney disease. I thought if I could get this donation done in 2020 that makes my 2020 amazing and someone elseâs 2020 amazing.â
Dawesâ interest in organ donation began with seeing a story on the news about a kidney donation back in 2017 and was re-ignited by the Humboldt Broncos bus crash in April 2018.
She ran into setbacks including the pandemic that put surgeries on hold, followed by her first recipient suddenly not being able to accept her kidney once surgeries began in the summer.
But last month Dawes was finally able to recognize her goal to give to someone else not just a better 2020, but a better life.
âThis has been many years in the works,â said Dawes. âThe whole idea came to me when I saw a clip on Global News in March 2017 about a fellow in Calgary who was going to donate a kidney to his friend, who was in desperate need of one. While they were in the process his friend was given a kidney by someone on a list. So he (donor) decided to join the anonymous program. His whole story just stuck with me and when I saw that I wanted to do that too.â
The story prompted Dawes to register as an organ donor a month later.
However, when her sisterâs husband passed away suddenly, Dawes had to withdraw from the program.
That all changed on her birthday on April 6 two years ago with the Broncos bus crash which killed 16 people, including Lethbridgeâs Logan Boulet.
âIâfelt like the universe was screaming at me âYou need to do this,ââ said Dawes. âSo I did some more talking with my family and friends and I re-registered again in April of last year.â
Dawes became an anonymous donor because she didnât know anybody specifically who needed a kidney.
âThere are so many different options you can take,â she said. âYou could also put limitations (such as) donating to someone in Alberta. They always expect the healthy person to travel to the person to donate. So I wanted a Canada-wide because I truly wanted a trip to Nova Scotia. The Kidney Program has a reimbursement program so this was not an out-of-pocket cost. A lot of donators will go early and take a week of holiday first and then you start your transplant process.â
Having re-registered to become an organ donor, Dawes underwent a battery of tests.
âThey test the person before they even try to find you a match because if youâre not healthy enough thereâs no point going further,â she said. âEvery step along the way they were very clear that they could find something that could be life changing for me and my health. They just want you to be prepared.â
Dawes underwent her testing in the summer of 2019 and by September she received the all-clear to proceed for a perfect fit.
This January a match was found in Alberta and more blood tests followed to ensure Dawes and the anonymous recipient were a match.
Then COVID hit in March and everything ground to a halt.
âThey cancelled all surgeries. This is considered an elective surgery,â said Dawes.
In July, Dawes received word that transplant operations were starting again. However, her match could no longer accept her kidney.
âBecause itâs anonymous I donât get to know why,â said Dawes. âSo we were back to square one, which was disappointing. I had done all this now, nothing.â
In August another match in Alberta was found.
âThen it went really quick,â said Dawes. âI had to redo all the testing. It was longer than a year (prior), so your health can change within a year. So they have to make sure youâre still healthy. Thankfully, a lot of the testing I was able to do at the Chinook Regional Hospital, so I didnât have to miss a lot of work.â
Because of COVID, Dawes had to be tested two weeks before the procedure and then quarantine.
By Dawesâ side throughout was her best friend, Sandee Mogdan.
âSandee was super supportive and every single appointment she was with me or drove me. We really bonded a bit more over this.â
With the surgery complete, the recipient of Dawes kidney remains strictly anonymous and will remain that way.
âItâs 100 per cent off the table,â she said. âIâm not to know them and theyâre not to know me. I like that. That is the best decision for me.â
Back home, Dawes has settled back into her life.
âThey warned me beforehand that itâs very common that after this is all done you can go into a depression,â she said. âThis has been such a focus for me for three-and-a-half years. Now that itâs over itâs like âWhat do I do?â They said the best thing to combat that is to have something else to look forward to.â
Perhaps that trip down east she so dearly wants.
âMy best friend and I are planning a post-pandemic trip somewhere, maybe Nova Scotia,â said Dawes with a laugh.
Earlier this year on April 7, Dawes proudly wore green for Green Shirt Day in honour of the Logan Boulet Effect in support of organ donor and awareness registration across Canada.
Boulet registered to become an organ donor a month before the tragic Broncos accident and saved six lives as a result of that decision in addition to inspiring hundreds of thousands of Canadians to become organ donors.
âIâm a huge supporter of that, absolutely. Itâs a fantastic program,â said Dawes. âTick the box on your driverâs licence. Itâs so simple.â
In addition to her best friend by her side, Dawes also credited her employers at Simpson Plumbing for giving her the time she needed to make her goal a reality.
âThere are so many people involved,â said Dawes. âYes, Iâm the one that gave the organ, but there are so many other people that if they didnât help me it never would have happened.â
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