HERSHEY, Pa. — Tears. Smiles. Laughter. It was an introduction that needed no introduction when kidney transplant recipient Dwayne Weller met his donor, Maureen Stathes. After all, part of her has been helping him function for almost a year.
“You look good,” Stathes told the Wellsville man after the pair embraced. She drew back to get a good look at the man whose life she dramatically changed, if not saved.
Weller presented his donor — a stranger before his surgery at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center — with an angel dangling from a silver necklace.
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The perfect match swung into motion in December 2020, when Stathes saw a TV news story about organ donation and learned some 100,000 people are waiting for a life-saving transplant.
“I had never thought about being a donor, but when I saw that number, I thought, ‘Well, I could do that,’” said Stathes, an avid trail runner, backpacker and bicyclist who lives in Bellefonte.
She called the number given on the screen and began the process of seeing whether she was a viable donor. She thought her age — 59 — might preclude her, but she learned in March 2021 that she passed with flying colors. Next, she had to choose a donation site.
Being well-versed in anything Penn State since she works in finance at the Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences, she chose the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. “I knew Penn State Health meant a good place with a good reputation,” she said.
Then it was time to tell her husband, Gus. “He knew my mind was made up, and he was supportive through it all,” she said.