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National Eye Donor Month - 2010-02-08

Maybe it’s a grandmother who can finally see her grandchildren’s faces for the first time. Or a child who can read once again after an accident left him visually impaired.
Thanks to the generosity of eye donors across Illinois and the work of Heartland Lions Eye Banks, seven individuals escape a lifetime of blindness each day through the miracle of corneal transplantation.
In recognition of National Eye Donor Month (NEDM) this March, the Eye Bank extends its thanks to its Partner in Donation, Fayette County Hospital, for helping the organization change the lives of those suffering from eye diseases, disorders or injuries in Vandalia and around the world. By facilitating the eye, organ and tissue donation process at Fayette County Hospital, staff members allow the Eye Bank to connect patients and their surgeons to life-changing corneal tissue.
Said Kelsie, a 14-year-old cornea recipient who underwent a transplant after a parasite stole her vision, “Now my eyesight is almost normal with a contact on, and playing sports is fun like it used to be. I don’t get looked at weird when people are talking to me, and I don’t have pain anymore. Because of my donor, I can finally live my life how I want, without anything bothering me.”
Last year, eye donors from Fayette County Hospital gave the gift of sight to six transplant recipients. Six individuals who can see the world with clear vision because of their donors’ ultimate gift and the caring staff of Fayette County Hospital who continue to support eye donation each day.
During NEDM, you’ll see information throughout Fayette County Hospital honoring those donors who live on through the eyes of grateful recipients and encouraging hospital visitors to pledge to become eye donors. For more details on NEDM and eye donation, please visit Heartland Lions Eye Banks at www.hleb.org.
 
Eye Donors Save the Sight of 156 Illinois Cornea Recipients
 
Become a Partner in Donation by Registering as a Donor During National Eye Donor Month This March
 
St. Louis, Mo. (February 8, 2010) – In 2009, 156 Illinois cornea transplant recipients escaped a lifetime of blindness thanks to the generosity of their eye donors and the work of Heartland Lions Eye Banks. Because of each donor’s remarkable gift, sight was saved for those suffering from an ocular disease, disorder or injury. Said Patricia, a cornea recipient, “I don’t know what I would have done without my donors. Who knows how many more years I would have been able to function without the surgery. Their gift means everything to me.”
 
During National Eye Donor Month this March, the Eye Bank, now in its 50th year of saving sight, encourages Fayette County residents to join them as Partners in Donation by pledging to become eye, organ and tissue donors. If you are older, have poor eyesight, or are afflicted with a non-communicable illness, eye donation may still be a viable option. In fact, 497 Illinois residents, including three from Fayette County Hospital, donated the gift of sight through the Eye Bank last year alone.
 
Registering as a donor takes just minutes at www.lifegoeson.com, the state’s first-person consent registry, or can be performed at any Illinois Secretary of State facility when renewing or obtaining a driver’s license. Most important, because of Illinois’ first-person registry, your decision to donate will be legally-binding, meaning your family will not have to make the difficult decision regarding your final wishes.
 
About Heartland Lions Eye Banks
Now celebrating its 50th anniversary, Heartland Lions Eye Banks is a division of the Missouri Lions Eye Research Foundation, a 501c(3) organization with the mission to preserve and restore the sight of people throughout Missouri and around the world. Since its founding, the Eye Bank has helped give the gift of sight to 33,000 people worldwide. The Eye Bank operates eight branches throughout Illinois, Missouri and Kansas with headquarters in Columbia, Mo. The Eye Bank is one of the five largest eye banks in the U.S. and offers high quality donor cornea tissue to transplant surgeons. In addition, the Eye Bank is committed to research for causes and cures for eye diseases.
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Background Information – National Eye Donor Month and Eye Donation
 
What is National Eye Donor Month?
Each year the eye banking community promotes the month of March as National Eye Donor Month in order to encourage eye donation in the communities that we serve. The first National Eye Donor Month was observed in 1983 as a result of a proclamation read by President Ronald Reagan to note this special public awareness month. Since then, a member of Congress has continued the tradition and reads a proclamation into the Congressional Record each March.
 
The Need For Eye Donation
More than 46,000 individuals received the “gift of sight” last year thanks to a corneal transplant. These individuals suffered vision loss from a corneal disease or injury that compromises quality of life, making it difficult to accomplish everyday tasks such as reading or even recognizing faces at a distance.
 
Fortunately, through the medical miracle of corneal transplantation, sight restoration is possible. The transplantation process depends on the priceless gift of eye donation from one human to another. Thanks to the selflessness and generous choice to pledge to become an eye donor after death, one’s legacy of giving can live on in another’s restored sight.
 
Pledge to Become an Eye Donor
You can register to become an organ and eye donor through your state’s registry system. While health conditions may restrict you from becoming an organ donor, eye donation restrictions are more lenient. If you are older, have poor eyesight or have a terminal, non-communicable illness, eye donation is still a viable option and a generous gift.
 
By registering through Illinois’ First Person Consent Organ and Tissue Donor Registry (www.lifegoeson.com), you automatically indicate your intent to become an organ donor. Your legally-binding decision will be recorded in the online database and kept confidential until your passing. With this new system, your family will not have to make a decision about your final wishes.
 
About Heartland Lions Eye Banks
Now celebrating its 50th year, Heartland Lions Eye Banks is a program of the Missouri Lions Eye Research Foundation, a 501(c)3 not-for-profit corporation with the mission to preserve and restore sight. The Eye Bank retrieves, processes and distributes the highest quality donor eye tissue to corneal surgeons. The Eye Bank services the Illinois, Missouri and Kansas areas with eight branches located in: Columbia, MO, Springfield, MO, St. Louis, MO, Kansas City, MO, Joplin, MO, Hays, KS, Wichita, KS and Springfield, IL.
 
In 2009, the Eye Bank gave the “gift of sight” to 156 Illinois residents by providing donated tissue for corneal transplantation. In addition to providing quality tissue for transplant, the Eye Bank is also actively involved in its local eye banking communities in promoting donation. Likewise, the Eye Bank’s parent company, the Missouri Lions Eye Research Foundation, provides a variety of vision screening and care programs and services in Missouri. For more information, please visit us at www.hleb.org or contact Nicole Plegge, Public Relations, 314-428-4373 x115.
 
Heartland Lions Eye Banks | www.hleb.org
Columbia, MO | Springfield, MO | St. Louis, MO | Kansas City, MO | Joplin, MO
 Springfield, IL | Hays, KS | Wichita, KS