UNMC, NHS To Hold April 20 Tree Planting in North

Platte To Raise Awareness for Organ and Tissue Donation

A tree-planting ceremony to honor organ donors and recipients will be

held April 20 in North Platte as part of “The Tree of Life” campaign being

sponsored by the University of Nebraska Medical Center and  Nebraska

Health System. Twenty-three Nebraska communities are participating in the

tree-planting campaign, which is designed to raise the awareness level

for organ and tissue donation. Twelve communities held events in 1998 with

the remaining communities holding events this spring.


 


The North Platte event is open to the public and will begin at 2 p.m.

at Centennial Park on the side of the park that is west of Great Plains

Regional Medical Center. North Platte Mayor Jim Whitaker and several key

Great Plains Regional Medical Center officials are expected to attend.

Several organ and tissue donor family members and organ recipients from

around the area also have been invited to attend. The medical center will

host a reception near the park gazebo following the tree planting. Cookies

and refreshments will be served.


 


In conjunction with the tree planting, an educational presentation

about organ and tissue donation will be made 1 p.m in the Platte Room at

Great Plains Regional Medical Center. This presentation will be made by

Kolleen Thompson, manager of organ recovery services for NHS and one of

the two coordinators of the campaign.


 


The Earl May Nursery and Garden Center in North Platte will donate

and plant the tree, which will be a blue spruce. A permanent plaque will

be planted at the base of the tree commemorating the event.


 


“The “Tree of Life” symbolizes the new life organ donation has brought

to those who were dying from end-stage organ failure and those who have

given the “gift of life,” said Kevin Warneke, associate director of public

affairs for UNMC and the other coordinator of the campaign.


 


Other communities holding ceremonies for “The Tree of Life” campaign

include:


Ainsworth            

Beatrice          Broken Bow      

Chadron            

Columbus           Fremont            

Grand Island


Hastings               

Holdrege        Kearney             

Lincoln              

McCook           

Neb. City           

Norfolk


Omaha                 

O’Neill           Petersburg          

Scottsbluff          Sidney               

S. Sioux City      Valentine


York


 


People may participate in the ceremony by giving a personal testimonial,

reading an original poem or singing a song. These activities will highlight

the importance of organ and tissue donation.


 


“The decision for organ donation comes at a time when a family begins

to realize their


lives will continue without someone they love,” Thompson said. “It

takes true courage and compassion to donate your loved one’s organs. The

new life that results for the organ recipient is something that will never

be forgotten.”


 


The campaign will help UNMC and NHS create awareness of The Lied Transplant

Center, which opened earlier this year on the UNMC/NHS campus. The 14-level

building features 44 patient care suites as well as considerable space

devoted to transplant research. Patients staying at the center take part

in an innovative cooperative care delivery system in which family or friends

serve as care partners for the basic care needs of patients receiving solid

organ or bone marrow transplants.


 


Despite UNMC/NHS’s stature as a leading transplant center, Nebraska

only ranks No. 24 among all states in producing donors based on population,

said Byers W. Shaw, Jr., M.D., professor and chairman of the UNMC Department

of Surgery and an organ transplant surgeon.


 


UNMC is the only public academic health science center in the state.

Through its commitment to research, education and patient care, UNMC has

established itself as one of the country’s leading centers for cancer research

and treatment and solid organ transplantation. More than $34 million in

research grants and contracts are awarded to UNMC scientists annually.

In addition, UNMC’s educational programs are responsible for training more

health professionals practicing in Nebraska than any other institution.


 


NHS is the partnership of Clarkson Hospital, the first hospital in

Nebraska, and University Hospital, the primary teaching facility for UNMC.

NHS operates 23 clinics and health care centers serving Omaha, Plattsmouth,

Gretna and Auburn in Nebraska; Council Bluffs and Shenandoah in Iowa. In

addition, NHS operates more than 350 outpatient clinics in 50 communities

in four states. The combined hospital is an 835-bed facility and serves

approximately 25 percent of the Omaha-area market share.