
Patient Profile - Patty Wood
NWABR Executive Committee and Board of Directors member, Patty Wood
never intended to become a spokesperson for the use of animals in
research. She remembers thinking, as a child, that she just wanted
"to do something good for the world." Patty has devoted
the last 20 years of her life to volunteering on behalf of kidney
patients, transplant recipients and biomedical research.
On October 3, her commitment to "doing something good for the
world" will be acknowledged at the Northwest Kidney Foundation's
Ninth Annual Celebration of Excellence, where she will receive the
Clyde Shields Distinguished Service Award.
At the age of 16, a severe case of strep throat changed the
course of Patty's life. The strep infection invaded and shut down
her kidneys. She first received a transplanted kidney from her brother,
and when it failed several years later, she was given a cadaveric
kidney. At that time she volunteered to be a research subject for
several procedures and new treatments aimed at reducing the complications
of kidney transplants. "I'm as much a research animal as the
dogs used to develop organ transplantation techniques," she says
with pride.
With her new kidneys came a commitment to tell others about kidney
research and the necessity of using animals in the search for the
cure for kidney failure. Despite the significant and ongoing medical
stresses that followed her transplant, Patty keeps a speaking and
advocacy schedule that would exhaust any human.
When NWABR was created in 1988, Patty stepped in to provide a patient's
perspective on research issues. Today, she co-chairs NWABR's Patients
for Animal Research (PAR) Committee which provides patients an opportunity
to educate the community by sharing their personal stories and life
experiences.
In 1989, Patty established the local chapter of Transplant Recipients
International Organization. She also worked diligently on the Washington
State Driver's License Organ Donor Program and helped with the development
of the newly-released U.S. Postal Service Organ Donor Stamp.
NWABR is a 501(c)3 organization. All contributions
are tax deductible.
The NWABR web site was made possible by funding from the National Center for
Research
Resources and the National Institutes of Health through a Science Education
Partnership Award.
Copyright 1999-2003 Northwest Association
for Biomedical Research
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