VIDEO: San Francisco Officer Donates Kidney to Stranger, Saving 9 People
As a soldier in the U.S. Army, Anna Cuthbertson served in the war zones of Iraq and Afghanistan. As a San Francisco police officer, she patrols the streets of the Richmond District, busting criminals and protecting citizens.
The average person might think that’s heroic enough. But in a selfless act initially meant to save one life, Cuthbertson, a mother of a 13-year-old girl, donated a kidney this week to a stranger, and in the process set off a chain reaction that made it possible for eight other people to receive lifesaving kidney transplants, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
“I thought, the more the merrier. I was thrilled,” said the 35-year-old Cuthbertson, who was recovering at UCSF on Thursday after undergoing the surgery on Tuesday.
The operation was the culmination of a mission that started about a year ago after she listened to an episode of the podcast “Strangers” featuring a story about a transplant that mentioned the website www.matchingdonors.com . Intrigued, she clicked onto the site.
“There are these saints that walk among us who decide I’ve got two good kidneys, I get to help someone, I can save someone I mean, it it’s – I’m humbled, I’m in awe,” Gary Grealis, husband of kidney recipient Joan Grealis, told KTVU . “Anna’s not just saving my wife, she’s saving me, too.”
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