Market design is full of both frustration and satisfaction. Kidney exchange provides an unusual amount of each. Sometimes the satisfactions come in unexpected ways. Below is an email I received yesterday, whose author gave me permission to share it here, along with the photo.
"Dear Dr. Roth,
I want to thank you for your role in establishing the New England Program for Kidney Exchange. On July 8 my husband Bryan, in a 3-way swap with donor/ recipient pairs at Hopkins, RIH/ Brown and Dartmouth, received his new kidney after years of failing health. He is already feeling remarkably better, and his new kidney is functioning well.
Here is a photo of our 3-year-old, Lincoln, and 3-month-old, Haven, thanking Bryan's brother for donating his kidney to a stranger at Hopkins so Bryan could receive one from Dartmouth. I can imagine that theoretical academic work can lack a human face at times, so I wanted to assure you that your work is truly changing lives. I can't thank you enough for giving my boys their Daddy back.
Yours,
Katie Silberman
Providence"
Update: Ms. Silberman writes
"hi Dr Roth,
Everyone at RIH was very pleased with your blog. Here is a little more about Bryan and our family, if you are interested - a website we created to look for a donor. Now not only is it out of date, but we can take it down! (we also learned that finding a donor from your community at large is nearly impossible - I really think swaps are the best answer by far, since it is only family members who will follow through with the process. I can't tell you how many leads we had that fell through along the way.)
We learned that Bryan's brother Stephen's kidney went to a 42-yr-old father of four in Maryland. Very gratifying.
best,
Katie"
3 comments:
Wow! Great job, Al (and others)!
Wonderful! I better no one has thanked you for matching them to the perfect hospital--but they should!
Thanks lot for sharing this nice story. I like it so much....
Smith Alan
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