My name is Jenny Lee and I am from Singapore. I am now 60 years of age and for many years I had been a victim of renal failure. But now, after having undergone a successful and painless kidney transplant in China, I am living a healthy and vibrant life to the fullest again.
It would be my pleasure and commitment to share with you my personal experience of a swift and truly remarkable kidney transplant in China and to coordinate for you in every respect if you are desirous of an immediate kidney transplant to live a healthy and normal life again but do not know where or how to go about getting it.
However, please do not be deterred by recent media report that there were some fatalities among foreign patients transplanted in China and thus depriving yourselves of a ready kidney transplant which has recently become more difficult to come by as the Chinese Government has become wary of international criticism of their organ transplant policies. In fact, many hospitals have been forced by the Chinese Health Authorities to cease performing organ transplant to foreigner from June 1st 2006.
After having investigated the media report myself, it is true that there were some fatal kidney transplants in the past but it is definitely no fault of the hospitals which are clean, modern and very well equipped. Besides, the operation itself is relatively simple with very little or no risk to the patient and the surgeons conducting the operations are all highly competent with extensive hands-on experience over many years with an average of 5 organ transplants weekly and about 300 annually in any of the hospitals that conduct organ or kidney transplant.
Very often than not, these unfortunate cases were attributed to the patients’ ignorance of not having undergone stringent pre-surgery tests and/or not having in their own country, continuous post-surgery tests for possible infection, transplanted organ rejection and monitoring of their general health conditions immediately upon arrival in their own country which is very critical and vital to the life of the patient and the life-span of the new organ. Another possible reason could be the unauthorized meddling of drug dosages by the patients themselves to save costs. |