PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Heart transplant recipient discovers a calling for advocacy, support for others

2024-04-11
(Press-News.org) 11 April, Prague, Czech Republic—Glen Kelley’s journey as a heart transplant recipient came full circle today in Prague, as he addressed attendees of the Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT), including members of his own care teams.

As a high school senior outside of Peoria, Illinois, Kelley was diagnosed with stage-4 Hodgkin’s lymphoma and underwent eight months of chemotherapy and radiation. After 10 months in remission, the cancer returned, and he received a bone marrow transplant. With his cancer once again in remission, he finished college and went on to enjoy an extremely active life for the next 17 years, skiing, cycling, climbing mountains, and even running marathons.

Then out of nowhere, Kelley suffered a heart attack at 36. Doctors found his right coronary artery nearly completely blocked and placed three stents to prop it open. Over the next decade, his ailing heart would require more stents, valve replacements, and not one but two coronary artery bypasses at the University of Minnesota Medical Center in Minneapolis. By 2015, Kelley was in heart failure — most likely the result of the radiation he received in his teens.

He was placed on the transplant list and eventually transferred to Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, where he received a new heart in 2016. An unusually long and rough recovery period followed, during which he suffered kidney failure, a fungal infection, and two bouts of organ rejection. In 2019, he received his second organ transplant, a kidney indirectly donated from his youngest son.

“I had support along the way from my physicians and healthcare providers to volunteers at the support group Second Chance for Life,” said Kelley. “I don’t think my outcomes would have been nearly as successful without the support I received throughout my journey.”

Despite all his health problems, Kelley led a successful career in IT and marketing, including 17 years at IBM. But it was through his experiences as a patient that he realized his true calling.

“My metrics changed from how well I did at my day job to how many patients I could help,” he said. “Patients became my currency.”

Kelley dedicated himself to supporting patients dealing with advanced heart disease through in-person and phone visitation and support groups, ultimately serving as president of Second Chance for Life for four years. During his tenure, the group created an alliance with the international group Mending Hearts, the world’s the largest peer-to-peer heart patient support organization with 115,000+ members.

With Mended Hearts, Kelley had an opportunity to continue working in patient education and support — and to become more involved in advocacy and legislation at the state and federal levels. Today, he serves as the group’s Patient Voice and Advocacy Leader.

“Working in advocacy allowed me to help not one but thousands of patients at a time,” he said.

Today, Kelley fills his days with phone calls to patients, in-person visits, and advising. In his new role as Patient Advocate Trustee on ISHLT Foundation Board of Trustees, Kelley will help to ensure the Foundation agenda addresses issues that matter most to patients with advanced heart and lung disease.

His highest calling yet may be serving the United States’ new Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN). Created last fall by a bipartisan law, OPTN is charged with revamping the country's organ transplant system. Kelley was elected thoracic patient representative to OPTN’s Board of Directors.

“Patients always need support, whether they know it or not, at some point in their journey,” said Kelley. “This motivates me to do the work I do. I want to empower patients through support and education and teach them how to self-advocate.”

END

About ISHLT

The International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) is a not-for-profit, multidisciplinary, professional organization dedicated to improving the care of patients with advanced heart or lung disease through transplantation, mechanical support, and innovative therapies via research, education, and advocacy. ISHLT members focus on transplantation and a range of interventions and therapies related to advanced heart and lung disease.

The Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions of the ISHLT will be held 10-13 April at the Prague Congress Centre in Prague, Czech Republic.

Contact:

Jess Burke, CAE
ISHLT Director of Marketing and Communications

+1.312.224.0015
jess.burke@ishlt.org

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

On World Parkinson’s Day, a new theory emerges on the disease’s origins and spread

On World Parkinson’s Day, a new theory emerges on the disease’s origins and spread
2024-04-11
The nose or the gut? For the past two decades, the scientific community has debated the wellspring of the toxic proteins at the source of Parkinson’s disease. In 2003, a German pathologist, Heiko Braak, MD, first proposed that the disease begins outside the brain. More recently, Per Borghammer, MD, with Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark, and his colleagues argue that the disease is the result of processes that start in either the brain’s smell center (brain-first) or the body’s intestinal tract (body-first).     A new hypothesis paper appearing in the Journal of Parkinson’s ...

ERC wants to see what shapes the stories AI tells us

ERC wants to see what shapes the stories AI tells us
2024-04-11
Professor Jill Walker Rettberg, Co-Director of the Centre for Digital Narrative at the University of Bergen, is awarded an ERC Advanced Grant for the project AI STORIES.  The grant consists of 2.5 million Euro over 5 years. This is Rettberg's second ERC Grant. “The AI STORIES project builds on the premise that storytelling is central to human culture, with narratives shaping our understanding of the world. We will study artificial intelligence and how it creates new narratives,” says Rettberg. Generative AI has been dubbed ...

New project explores warfare in animal societies

New project explores warfare in animal societies
2024-04-11
A major new research project will investigate how and why groups of animals from the same species fight one another. By focussing on warlike species – mongooses and termites – researchers aim to understand how evolution can lead to extreme aggression between groups, the consequences of this and the factors that can lead to peace. The results will help to explain why violence between rival groups evolves in some species but not others, or between some groups and not others – with implications for our understanding of human evolution. The research team, led by Professor ...

Mirta Galesic awarded ERC Advanced Grant

Mirta Galesic awarded ERC Advanced Grant
2024-04-11
[Vienna, April 11, 2024] – The European Research Council (ERC) has awarded an Advanced Grant to Mirta Galesic, a resident scientist at the Complexity Science Hub (CSH), to study the intricate workings of collective adaptation. The project aims to provide insights into why collectives – from families to entire societies – can be stuck in deadlocks about important problems, such as resolving long-standing political conflicts; or why they sometimes appear incapable of finding seemingly obvious solutions, such ...

Twinkle twinkle baby star, 'sneezes' tell us how you are

Twinkle twinkle baby star, sneezes tell us how you are
2024-04-11
Fukuoka, Japan—Kyushu University researchers have shed new light into a critical question on how baby stars develop. Using the ALMA radio telescope in Chile, the team found that in its infancy, the protostellar disk that surrounds a baby star discharges plumes of dust, gas, and electromagnetic energy. These 'sneezes,' as the researchers describe them, release the magnetic flux within the protostellar disk, and may be a vital part of star formation. Their findings were published in The Astrophysical Journal. Stars, including our Sun, all develop from what are called stellar nurseries, large ...

Pork labelling schemes ‘not helpful’ in making informed buying choices, say researchers

2024-04-11
Researchers have evaluated different types of pig farming – including woodland, organic, free range, RSPCA assured, and Red Tractor certified, to assess each systems’ impact across four areas: land use (representing biodiversity loss), greenhouse gas emissions, antibiotics use and animal welfare. Their study concludes that none of the farm types performed consistently well across all four areas – a finding that has important implications for increasingly climate conscious consumers, as well as farmers themselves. However, there were individual farms that did perform well ...

Oxidant pollutant ozone removes mating barriers between fly species

Oxidant pollutant ozone removes mating barriers between fly species
2024-04-11
Ozone disrupts chemical communication crucial to mating in insects Insect pheromones are odor molecules used for chemical communication within a species. Sex pheromones play a crucial role in the mating of many insects. Species-specific odors attract males and females of the same species. At the same time, they maintain the natural boundaries between species. The research team led by Nanji Jiang, Bill Hansson and Markus Knaden from the Department of Evolutionary Neuroethology at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology has ...

Ocean currents threaten to collapse Antarctic ice shelves

Ocean currents threaten to collapse Antarctic ice shelves
2024-04-11
Meandering ocean currents play an important role in the melting of Antarctic ice shelves, threatening a significant rise in sea levels. A new study published in Nature Communications has revealed that the interplay between meandering ocean currents and the ocean floor induces upwelling velocity, transporting warm water to shallower depths. This mechanism contributes substantially to the melting of ice shelves in the Amundsen Sea of West Antarctica. These ice shelves are destabilizing rapidly and contributing to sea level rise. Led by Taewook Park and Yoshihiro Nakayama, ...

Nothing is everything: How hidden emptiness can define the usefulness of filtration materials

Nothing is everything: How hidden emptiness can define the usefulness of filtration materials
2024-04-11
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Voids, or empty spaces, exist within matter at all scales, from the astronomical to the microscopic. In a new study, researchers used high-powered microscopy and mathematical theory to unveil nanoscale voids in three dimensions. This advancement is poised to improve the performance of many materials used in the home and in the chemical, energy and medical industries — particularly in the area of filtration. Magnification of common filters used in the home shows that, while they look like a solid ...

Cloud engineering could be more effective ‘painkiller’ for global warming than previously thought - study

2024-04-11
Cloud ‘engineering’ could be more effective for climate cooling than previously thought, because of the increased cloud cover produced, new research shows.  In a study published in Nature Geoscience (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-024-01427-z), researchers at the University of Birmingham found that marine cloud brightening (MCB), also known as marine cloud engineering, works primarily by increasing the amount of cloud cover, accounting for 60-90% of the cooling effect.  Previous models ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Air pollution linked to longer duration of long-COVID symptoms

Soccer heading damages brain regions affected in CTE

Autism and neural dynamic range: insights into slower, more detailed processing

AI can predict study results better than human experts

Brain stimulation effectiveness tied to learning ability, not age

Making a difference: Efficient water harvesting from air possible

World’s most common heart valve disease linked to insulin resistance in large national study

Study unravels another piece of the puzzle in how cancer cells may be targeted by the immune system

Long-sought structure of powerful anticancer natural product solved by integrated approach

World’s oldest lizard wins fossil fight

Simple secret to living a longer life

Same plant, different tactic: Habitat determines response to climate

Drinking plenty of water may actually be good for you

Men at high risk of cardiovascular disease face brain health decline 10 years earlier than women

Irregular sleep-wake cycle linked to heightened risk of major cardiovascular events

Depression can cause period pain, new study suggests

Wistar Institute scientists identify important factor in neural development

New imaging platform developed by Rice researchers revolutionizes 3D visualization of cellular structures

To catch financial rats, a better mousetrap

Mapping the world's climate danger zones

Emory heart team implants new blood-pumping device for first time in U.S.

Congenital heart defects caused by problems with placenta

Schlechter named Cancer Moonshot Scholar

Two-way water transfers can ensure reliability, save money for urban and agricultural users during drought in Western U.S., new study shows

New issue of advances in dental research explores the role of women in dental, clinical, and translational research

Team unlocks new insights on pulsar signals

Great apes visually track subject-object relationships like humans do

Recovery of testing for heart disease risk factors post-COVID remains patchy

Final data and undiscovered images from NASA’s NEOWISE

Nucleoporin93: A silent protector in vascular health

[Press-News.org] Heart transplant recipient discovers a calling for advocacy, support for others