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In early 2020, married couple Mark and Lynn Scotch of Plover, Wisconsin, met Hugh Smith in a restaurant in Natchitoches, Louisiana. The three of them hit it off, as if they were old friends. After talking for an hour, Hugh suddenly got up to leave. Mark and Lynn, disappointed, asked him to stay and eat with them. Awkwardly, Hugh explained it was time for his dialysis therapy, and he needed to go home. Hugh had end stage renal disease, and every night at 8:00 p.m., he performed peritoneal dialysis to replace the function of his kidneys. As Hugh told Mark and Lynn his story, he mentioned he was on a transplant list and looking for a living kidney donor. Mark responded, ĢýWell, IĢýll give you one of mine."
Hugh gave Mark his card and the number of his transplant coordinator. The very next day, Mark gave Hugh and his coordinator a call and started the process of becoming a living kidney donor. Inspired by this, Lynn decided to follow in MarkĢýs footsteps to become a donor as well.
Mark continued to work with HughĢýs transplant coordinator and research as much as he could about living organ donors and kidney transplantation. Roughly each day waiting for a kidney transplant, and there are currently almost 90,000 people waiting for a kidney transplant in the United States alone. As he learned more, his thoughts turned to advocacy. What if he could turn his bike ride from Wisconsin to Louisiana into something bigger?
Mark decided to contact the (NKR) to see if they could help him with his advocacy efforts. The NKR led Mark to the (NKDO), where prospective donors are connected to mentors devoted to donor education and transplantation advocacy. From his mentor, Mark learned about the NKRĢýs Voucher Program, which changed everything.
The NKRĢýs works a lot like a paired kidney exchange, where a donor donates their kidney to a different recipient in exchange for a more compatible kidney for their original intended recipient. However, the Voucher Program also allows the donor to schedule donation surgery at a more convenient time for them while prioritizing the voucher holder (the organ recipient) for a living kidney donor through the NKR. Voucher donors are also given precedence for kidney transplant in the rare case they ever need one in the future.
MarkĢýs mentor from the NKDO explained that through this Voucher Program, Mark would be able to have his donor operation in Madison, Wisconsin, alleviating the concerns Mark and Lynn had about staying in Louisiana for any post-op complications. Having the surgery in Wisconsin meant Mark could stay close to home. The Voucher Program not only ensured that Hugh would get a much better-matched kidney, but also that someone else in need of a transplant would receive MarkĢýs kidney. Hugh was ecstatic and agreed to become a part of the NKR. So, Mark and Hugh both registered themselves at their nearest NKR-affiliated hospitals in Madison, Wisconsin, and Jackson, Mississippi, respectively. On September 30, 2020, Mark donated his kidney to a stranger in need.
Both Mark and HughĢýs surgeries and recoveries were successful. MarkĢýs kidney went to a transplant recipient in New York, and Hugh is doing very well after receiving his kidney from Southern California.
Seven months after MarkĢýs recovery, he made the bike ride from Madison, Wisconsin, to Natchitoches, Louisiana, a journey of over 1,400 miles. This became the Organ Trail.
While Mark bikes along the Organ Trail, Lynn accompanies him in their vehicle to provide any necessary support. Along their route, Mark draws media attention to spread awareness about living organ donation and the dire need for donors for the thousands of people awaiting a kidney. Since this initial journey, Mark and Lynn have completed many Organ Trail rides, and they are planning their next ride in June 2024 to continue their advocacy work bringing awareness to living kidney donation. This ride will also commemorate LynnĢýs more recent kidney donation story.
Months later, a friend of Mark and LynnĢýs connected them to Katie Thompson, mom of two-year-old Cooper, who had been on dialysis since he was eight months old. His doctors were searching for a kidney donor for him, and Lynn decided: she would donate her kidney through the Voucher Program and give the voucher to Cooper so he would be a high priority on the NKR transplant list.
On January 10, 2023, Lynn donated her kidney to a stranger in Illinois. On March 2, 2023, Cooper received a kidney that was an excellent match. Just last month, Cooper celebrated his one-year Ģýkidneyversary.Ģý Both donor and recipient are doing wonderfully.
To learn more about the Organ Trail and even ride along with Mark on his upcoming trip, visit Mark and LynnĢýs website here: .
Publication date: April 2024