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Danielle Cermele
Sheila Nesmith-Worms Needs A LIVING Liver DONOR
Friends who are family 🤍
My name is Danielle and my best friend Sheila is in the process of looking for a living liver donor! Sheila is one of the greatest humans I have ever met. She is loving, caring, selfless, fierce, hard working, and will light up any room she’s in. To know Sheila is to love her ! Sheila and I love to get together and have a good time and laugh! ( laughter is the best Medicine right ?)
I have not noticed liver failure affect Sheila’s life because she is always try’s to power through the pain and always puts a smile on her face !
A transplant would mean to Sheila and her family and friends is a chance to live a pain free and longer life.
I and my best friend Katelyn are Sheila’s champions. (Champions are a team that helps your family or friend with finding a donor) we are currently getting Sheila's story out there and encouraging people to get tested!
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START YOUR JOURNEY
Become Sheila Nesmith-Worms's Donor
If you are considering being a living donor please use links below to contact Sheila Nesmith-Worms's Transplant Center. Begin by completing the donor questionnaire
Medical expenses for living organ donors are 100% covered, and inquires from potential donors are 100% confidential! Contact the Transplant Center to learn more about living donation.
By sharing this story you are bringing hope and opportunity to a patient in need
Share the Importance of Living Donation
Liver transplantation has been a successful treatment and standard of care for end-stage liver disease since the early 1980s.
Technical advancements in liver surgery, as well as the liver's tremendous ability to regenerate, have made living donor liver transplantation a life-saving reality.
There are currently 120,000 people waiting for a lifesaving organ transplant in the U.S. Of these, 15,000 await liver transplants.
Although more than 6,000 liver transplants were performed last year, over 1,700 patients died while waiting on the list.
Deceased donor livers are allocated to patients based on how sick they are, determined by their MELD score, where sicker patients receive priority.
Living donation offers patients the option of transplant before they get very sick--regardless of MELD score--significantly decreasing the time they wait for a liver.
Living donation not only saves the life of the recipient; it also frees up a liver for a patient on the waiting list who does not have that option.
The Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) and Pediatric End-Stage Liver Disease (PELD) are numerical, objective scales that allocate available livers to the sickest patients. Patients move up the list as their scores increase.
The first living donor liver transplant took place in 1988. Since then, living donors have continued giving the gift of life and making a difference.
When a recipient has a living donor, the wait time for transplant is shorter and the transplant can be scheduled in advanced when the recipient is in good health and when it is convenient for both the donor and the recipient.
Financial burdens shouldn’t prevent the gift of life. The National Living Donor Assistance Center (NLDAC) can offer financial support for living donor travel expenses.