Readers have asked us to cover the topic of “Is Amy Silverstein Still Alive?” so here we go with the basics. Please take the time to read this and educate yourself.
Is Amy Silverstein Alive?
A Contribution by Amy Silverstein CBS News, April 23, 2023, 10:11. Amy Silverstein is a published author and a two-time heart transplant patient.
However, sincere appreciation frequently results in a veil of quiet that masks the truth. Amy Silverstein calls for reform of organ-transfer-dependent medications.
Amy Silverstein, the author of “Sick Girl” and a long-term survivor of a heart transplant, provides perspective.
Time: 5:00 a.m. ET on April 18, 2023 From the pen of Marine Buffard A Contribution by Amy Silverstein Author of the books “Sick Girl” and “My Glory Was I Had Such Friends.”
You can also check out the details we have provided relating to Jean Smart’s heart surgery:
What Does Amy Silverstein discuss about the heart transplant she underwent?
Amy Silverstein was diagnosed with terminal cancer last month. The author of Sick Girl just published an article in which she bids farewell to her own heart. That is to say, the heart she now carries within her body is the donor’s heart, and she bids farewell to it.
It was Silverstein’s second heart transplant; the previous one she had at age 25 has allowed her to live for over four decades. She writes about her deep appreciation for the life she has been given, but also of the “gratitude paradox” she and another transplant recipient experience.
While the “miracle” of these transplants kept her alive, the “sorry state of transplant medicine” means that her life expectancy will be far lower than it otherwise would have been.
Silverstein says she has been using the same “t0xic triad of immunosuppressive medicines—calcineurin inhibitors, antimetabolites, steroids” for decades. Unfortunately, the cancer that will ultimately kἰll her was caused by the very drυgs that spared her life.
Yes, she is thankful for her life, but she disagrees with the narrative that “discourages transplant recipients from talking freely about the real problems we face and the compromising and life-thr*atening side effects of the medicines we must take.”
She argues that the medical establishment should set higher standards for the care given to transplant recipients. For the sake of your great hearts, I am speaking up now. Please read the entire essay.
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