HERSHEY, Pa. — Last March, Jen Schwinn got the phone call no mother ever wants to get. Her four-month-old daughter, Jaycee, was in the hospital in cardiac arrest and unresponsive. When Jaycee died, the family decided that donating her organs would help bring healing from pain.
And so, on Feb. 24, instead of spending a cold Sunday afternoon at home with her family, Jen and her husband brought Jaycee’s siblings Jacob, 8, and Jolee, 3, from their York home to a ceremony on the campus of Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, where they spent time with the families of other organ and tissue donors, reminding themselves how death can lead to new life.
They listened as liver recipient Bill Griffis of Berks County told how his wife was watching him die from liver disease when Dr. Zakiyah Kadry, chief of the Division of Abdominal Transplant at Penn State Health saved his life by transplanting a donated liver.
“Your loved ones are heroes — every single one of them,” he told the more than 100 family members and friends gathered at the University Conference Center. “It was so hard for me knowing that a young man died so I could live. But everything I do now is for my donor.”