Second-year medical student Harras Zaid has seen his share of organ transplants. Under the wing of UCSF transplant surgeons, he has traveled to distant hospitals to observe as the body of a person whose life has ended gives up the organs that will save or enhance many other lives. In operating rooms at UCSF Medical Center, he has seen patients in dire conditions transformed as organs damaged by disease are replaced by healthy livers, kidneys, hearts and lungs.
Zaid is an experienced photographer and a contributor to UCSF's weekly student newspaper,
Synapse. He asked Nancy Ascher, MD, PhD, chair of surgery, for permission to photograph the transplant procedure. Ascher and John Roberts, MD, chief of the UCSF Transplantation Service, offered to let him film in their adjoining operating rooms as they conducted one of the most challenging transplant operations: removing part of the liver from a living donor to restore the health of a recipient with advanced liver disease. Donor Michael Ansell and his mother, Deanna McLemore, gave their permission for Zaid to photograph their experience.
Gift of Life: Son's Liver Donation Saves His Mother is published today in
Synapse, in the newspaper's first use of process color. In partnership with Zaid and
Synapse, we're offering a
slideshow of these photos, along with additional images not included in the paper's print edition.
Related Links:
Gift of Life: Son's Liver Donation Saves His Mother
Synapse, December 7, 2006
Spotlight: Harras Zaid Live Transplant Photos
UCSF Today, December 7, 2006
UCSF Transplantation Service
"The Wait for Life" Highlights Organ Sharing Debate, with UCSF's Liver Transplant Service at the Center
UCSF Today, September 29, 2006
Profiles: Carrie Shellhammer: Double-lung Transplant Patient Looking Forward to Ski Season
UCSF Medical Center, October 2005
Profiles: Alex Esteverena: Kid Brother's Kidney Keeps Father of Two Alive
UCSF Medical Center, 2001
Organ Donors Can Express Their Commitment Online
More than 18,000 Californians are waiting for organ transplants
that can save their lives and restore their normal health. One-third will
die before an organ is found. Only a few organs (kidney, liver, lung,
intestine) can be donated by a living friend or relative - and even
when friends would be glad to donate, they must have a matching blood
type and meet the medical criteria for such an operation.
Yet, even if you would like to donate your organs in case
of your unfortunate death, you can't depend on the pink dot on your driver's
license to make that possible. Now, Californians can sign up online to
join the Donate Life California organ and tissue donor registry, a list
that identifies willing donors throughout California. In the process,
you can sign a document to help inform your family that you would like
to give the gift of life to others. One person's donation can help: One
donor can save or enhance the lives of more than 50 people.
To sign up, learn more and read the stories of transplant
families, visit Donate
Life California.
To volunteer to help raise awareness of transplant organ
donation, visit the California Transplant
Donor Network website or call 510/444-8500 (toll-free 888/570-9400).
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