June 14, 2016

61416ChroniclePhilanthropyAd300Texas Children’s is the honored sponsor for every Tuesday’s “Houston Legends” series. For more than 20 weeks, we will showcase the legendary care Texas Children’s has provided since 1954, and focus on milestone moments in our unique history. Also, a complementary website offers a more detailed look at our past, our story and our breakthroughs.

On the right is the Texas Children’s ad that is featured in this week’s Chronicle. Click the ad to visit our companion website at texaschildrens.org/legendarycare. The website will change weekly to complement the newspaper ad, which will be published in section A of the Chronicle on Tuesdays for the next 20 weeks. We also will spotlight this special feature weekly on Connect, so stay tuned to learn and share our rich history.

Click here to visit the Promise website.

61516transplantinside640A team of transplant recipients and living donors from Texas Children’s are in Cleveland, Ohio this week competing in the Transplant Games of America. A group from Texas Children’s has participated in the games for the past several years and will this year compete in 13 different events including golf, baseball, tennis, poker, trivia and more.

“We all are very excited about the opportunity to participate in this event,” said Melissa Nugent, educational coordinator for Transplant Services and a chaperone at the games. “It’s amazing to be here and to see what these children are able to do because they were given the gift of life.”

One of Texas Children’s team members is 13-year-old Cade Alpard. Cade was diagnosed with biliary atresia at 6-weeks-old following being jaundiced at birth. He was put on the liver transplant list by six months of age and at 1-year-old received his transplant. The road to transplantation was anything but easy, though with Cade developing every complication known to biliary atresia and according to his mom, Jennifer Alpard, even inventing his own.

Before receiving a new liver, Cade had a host of issues that landed him in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit including an adverse reaction to an antibiotic and a central line infection. He was discharged and the family had round-the-clock nursing care at home because Jennifer and her husband, Scott Alpard, both continued to work full time. Cade was fed and given medication through his IV and one night his nurse sent in an order for routine labs, including liver and kidney functions. Jennifer received a confusing call from Texas Children’s Emergency Center that evening explaining Cade was in kidney failure. She asked, “Don’t you mean liver failure?”

The physician explained that because of the antibiotics reaching a toxic level, Cade was not only in liver failure, but also kidney failure and lost his hearing. That night, Cade was admitted to Texas Children’s for the 15th time in his short life and was immediately placed on dialysis. In addition to the liver and kidney failure, he also went into respiratory failure and found himself back in the PICU.

The Alpards were told that patients don’t usually recover from three organ failures, but they didn’t lose hope. Cade spent nine weeks in the PICU and his parents never left his side. One night, Jennifer awoke to Cade’s crib filled with blood. His nurse sprang into action and transfused his blood. A few hours later, the Alpards received the call they were anxiously waiting for – a liver was available.

Dr. John Goss, medical director of Texas Children’s Transplantation Program, and his team harvested a liver from a 3-year-old girl and transplanted it into 1-year-old Cade, who recovered well and went home on 15 different medications. At 15-months-old, Cade received a cochlear implant and began intensive physical, occupational and speech therapy at home and at Texas Children’s. Little by little he learned to crawl and then walk, he learned to swallow and eat normal foods and started down a path of a happy, healthy life.

Now, Cade is a typical 13-year-old boy who loves sports – especially baseball. He competes on a tournament team and plays catcher and second baseman. He’s known as a “diamond thief” because he steals home and is one of the fastest members of his team. Baseball is one of the events Cade is competing in this week at the Transplant Games of America. His dad will join him not only for support, but as a bone marrow transplant donor as well.

Watch an ABC-13’s story about Cade and his trip to the games here.

“These games are truly a celebration of life,” said Sarah Koohmaraie, a liver transplant coordinator, a living donor and a two-time participant in the Transplant Games of America. “It is a time to reflect upon the gift of life that was given by deceased and living donors and donor families.”

Heart Transplant Coordinator and Transplant Games of America chaperone Diana Harter agreed and said the games are a way to celebrate the journey of her patients, all that they’ve overcome and all that lies before them.

“It is a way to honor their hardships and struggles, while embracing gratitude that they are still here to do great things with their amazing gift,” she said. “I feel honored to share this experience with my patients and their families this year – it is an opportunity for us to celebrate the gift of life and remember those donors that made this possible for them.”

June 7, 2016

6816ChronResearch640Each week, Texas Children’s publishes a newspaper ad and companion website featuring our milestones as part of the Houston Chronicle’s historic Houston Legends series.

Click here for this week’s feature.

June 1, 2016

6116ChronicleEducationinside350Texas Children’s Hospital is proud to be a part of the Houston Chronicle’s 115th year celebration, which kicked off this week. To mark this occasion, the Houston Chronicle launched a six-month commemorative series that will tell the dramatic stories of Houston as “A City That Could.”

As part of this historic event, each daily publication of the Chronicle will feature an editorial section highlighting Houston’s iconic people, events, business, culture, medical and sciences, sports and major events.

Texas Children’s is the honored sponsor for every Tuesday’s “Houston Legends” series. For more than 20 weeks, we will showcase the legendary care Texas Children’s has provided since 1954, and focus on milestone moments in our unique history. Also, a complementary website offers a more detailed look at our past, our story and our breakthroughs.

On the right is the Texas Children’s ad that was featured in the Chronicle. Click the ad to visit our companion website at texaschildrens.org/legendarycare. The website will change weekly to complement the newspaper ad, which will be published in section A of the Chronicle on Tuesdays for the next 22 weeks. We also will spotlight this special feature weekly on Connect, so stay tuned to learn and share our rich history.

6116runforreason640Texas Children’s Hospital was again chosen to be an official charity for the January 15, 2017 Houston Marathon and Half Marathon, which means you can run for a reason. You can be on the Texas Children’s Running Team and fundraise on behalf of Texas Children’s Hospital, knowing your donations will directly impact the lives of countless sick children.

Learn more and how to sign up for the team.

6116typhoontexastri640More than 1,000 children participated in the Typhoon Texas Kids Tri, making it the second largest kid’s triathlon in the world.

Texas Children’s Hospital sponsored the event, which was held on May 22 at the new Typhoon Texas waterpark in Katy.

Participants ages 6 to 17 swam the lazy river in the waterpark then biked and ran around the Katy Mills Mall before sprinting back to an amazing finish and post race inside Typhoon Texas.

Congratulations to all!

May 18, 2016

51816flowerdoorsinside175Texas Children’s first annual May Flowers fundraising drive is currently underway, and employees can be a part of making it a huge success!

Here’s the plan: Members of the Development Department are going to hang spring flowers on the doors of our patients’ rooms to brighten their days. Donors who give to Texas Children’s as part of the campaign can personalize the flowers with their names and locations to show our patients they are thinking of them and to help Texas Children’s continue to provide the very best care to children and families in the Houston area and beyond.

Here are two things that you can do to help:

  • Share on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Let your friends and family know they can join you in bringing some spring fun to our patients.
  • Send a flower by making a donation. Send a flower to one of our patients, and we’ll decorate their door with a personalized flower from you. texaschildrens.org/flowers.

These flowers will do more than bring some spring cheer inside our walls. More importantly, they will help Texas Children’s ensure that children in need of advanced critical, surgical and emergency care can always find it here when they need it the most.

We are well on our way to being able to decorate all our patients’ doors with colorful spring flowers that show them just how much people care. With your help, our hallways will soon be in full bloom!

The last day of the campaign is Friday, May 20. Flowers will be hung in early June and stay up through the end of the month.

To personalize one with your name, give today: texaschildrens.org/flowers.