Meet Don Bill, kidney transplant recipient

WVU transplant patient: Don BillIn 2020, Don Bill, 75, of Uniontown, Pennsylvania, was working with his nephrologist to monitor his decreasing kidney function. He knew that he might need to go on dialysis in the future, but when he contracted COVID-19, his kidneys began to fail.

“I caught COVID before Christmas, and I was in the hospital for 13 days,” Don said. “I had to go on emergency dialysis while I was in the hospital.”

After he was released from the hospital, Don’s medical team ran tests to determine if he would qualify for a transplant. He remained on dialysis for a year before a kidney became available.

“I got a call, and they asked if I could be up there in four hours. We hurried up and drove up there, and at 12:30 Christmas morning, that’s when they started putting my new kidney in. It was the gift of a lifetime on Christmas,” Don said.

“I was very happy. I didn’t think I would match so fast. Everyone I talked to said four-to-five years, and with my age, I might not be eligible anymore after five years. I am so thankful that I got my kidney when I did.”

Don’s transplant went well, and he was on the road to recovery soon after.

“The transplant team was incredible. They kept me posted on everything, and I felt like I was getting special treatment. Everyone was extra nice,” Don said.

“I had surgeries to repair hernias after I retired from working in the coal mines, and my kidney transplant was much easier than those. Two days after my surgery, I was feeling great. I was able to sit up in my bed and eat normally.”

Because of Don’s history of COVID-19 and the possibility of contracting it again, he had to be more vigilant after his transplant. The antirejection medications recipients are required to take causes them to have a compromised immune system, meaning that diseases like COVID-19 are more likely to result in hospitalization or death.

“I had to be extra careful after my transplant,” Don said. “I only left the house for doctor’s appointments for about three months. After that, I could go for walks outside where there weren’t a lot of people around or wear a mask if I was going to be around people. Now, my strength is built up to where I am almost back to normal.”

For Don, receiving a kidney was both life-changing and life giving.

“It’s one of the best things that’s ever happened to me,” Don said. “It’s just been great. I am so thankful for my doctors, my transplant team, my donor, and their family. I thank God every day for it.”