Former BJ medical writer Phil Canuto is celebrating an incredible
event: the 15th anniversary of his successful kidney transplant from
his cousin.
Phil, Executive Editor of Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine,
wrote:
“Fifteen
years ago today I received a new kidney from my cousin after being on dialysis
for seven months. My doctors thought the kidney might last for 15 years, but it
is still going strong.
“Much is said about the transformational power of organ transplantation that it has almost become a cliché. But it really is true. The transplant not only saved my life, it gave me the best 15 years of my life.
“Many thanks to my cousin (who I have kept anonymous on social media) and to all the people kept me alive these many years. And thanks also to those closest to me who have supported me – and endured – my many health problems.
“And if you haven’t signed your donor info when you get your driver’s license, please consider it.”
My
memory of Phil at Ol’ Blue Walls (1987-95) was his astonishment when I revealed
my chloresterol count in the 120s (thanks to my Polish grandmother’s DNA): “That
can’t be. That’s marathon runner levels.”
Grandma
Olesky’s DNA will has my count in the 104s today.
Phil
came from Jacksonville, Illinois by way of Northwestern University School of
Journalism (Patrick T. Englehart’s alma mater, too) to the BJ. He still lives
in Akron.
Before
writing for the Cleveland Clinic, Phil was Public Information Officer for the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Food and Information Service.
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