6/30/2010
Reed Hollinshead
ITD Communication
208-334-8881
reed.hollinshead@itd.idaho.gov
"Alive because of someone else's choice," organ transplant advocate Greiner visits Idaho to support life-saving decision
BOISE
- Each
year, the Idaho Transportation Department promotes the Donate Life organ donation message. Saving lives is key to ITD's mission on the
highways. Saving lives elsewhere just makes sense.
With ITD's headquarters as
the backdrop on Monday afternoon, the story of Mike Greiner and his quest
unfolds:
Seven years ago
Greiner couldn't go down a flight of stairs at his home in Lincoln, Ill., without stopping to rest. His
kidneys and pancreas were stopping, too.
At the same
time, unbeknownst to Greiner, a circulatory disorder called arteriovenous malformation
was running roughshod over 21-year-old Annie Fleming in a small town in Wisconsin.
Fleming made the
choice to be an organ donor. That's where their lives intersect. Greiner was
the recipient not only of new organs, but new life.
"Thank
you doesn't suffice," said an emotional Greiner. "I'm alive because of someone else's choice."
In 2004, Mike
and wife Sheri started planning the "organ donation evangelism" tour. They
began saving and planning, and when the house in Lincoln sold, they hit
the road.
Now, the Greiner
family travels the U.S. looking to pay it forward by signing up new organ
donors in each state they visit. The couple, along with children Levi and
Chloe, stopped at ITD to lend a voice to the cause and to issue a challenge to
sign up organ donors today (Wednesday, June 30).
Click here to access ITD's Facebook page and a photo of the Greiner family.
Via the
organs, eyes and tissue, eight different people could be touched by one persons
decision to be an organ donor. The decision to be an organ donor can touch or
enhance the lives of 50 people.
The potential
is staggering, said Greiner. As an example, he points to California, where the
DMV offices signed up an additional 40,000 organ donors during the week the
Greiners were there. "Times each one by eight, then by 50 - that's potentially
over 2 million lives impacted!"
Nationally,
there are about 108,000 people awaiting a life-saving organ transplant. In
Idaho, the number is about 450, according to Alex McDonald, public relations director for Intermountain Donor Services. "We work closely with the drivers
license division in each state to help people register as organ donors,"
McDonald said.
McDonald added
that the quickest way to become an organ donor is to go through the www.yesidaho.org website, or if your drivers
license needs to be renewed, organ donation also can be selected at the local
DMV office.
MEDIA ADVISORY --Video footage of the Greiner Donate Life
interview can be downloaded from the FTP site: ftp://ftp1.idaho.gov. Log on with the user name itdcommu and use the password W39gy7D2.