Versiti - Chad Dunning | Impact Stories
Explore our service lines

ChadDunning

“When you get a second chance at life, when you wake up in the morning and the sun is shining, you know it’s going to be a good day.”

Chad Dunning

Chad Dunning was coming in from doing yardwork when he began to feel unwell. He noticed blood in his stool and went to the emergency room, where doctors told him it was a bout of colitis. The next day, he saw his G.I. doctor, who thought he might have gallstones and scheduled him for a procedure to remove any stones in the bile ducts of his liver.

During surgery, however, doctors discovered that Chad had primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), a disease-causing bile duct inflammation and scarring that eventually leads to liver failure. Its only cure is a liver transplant.

Chad spent nine years on the liver transplant waiting list, undergoing procedures every six weeks to open up his bile ducts. In early September 2014, he began feeling unwell and was admitted to the hospital. “My doctor said, ‘Over the weekend, I’m going to find you a liver,’” Chad says. “That weekend on September 7, they came in and said they had a potential liver for me.”

The next day, September 8, 2014, Chad underwent a 12-hour liver transplant surgery.

Now, in his job with Versiti Blood Center of Wisconsin’s donor services, Chad is passionate about making connections with Versiti blood donors and spreading the word about organ and tissue donation. “The first thing you have to do is educate the community,” he says. “That’s my main thing, even with blood donation. A lot of donors don’t even know what they can do and how many lives they can save. 

Today, Chad is grateful for his donor hero, Molly, and her precious gift. “When you get a second chance at life, when you wake up in the morning and the sun is shining, you know it’s going to be a good day,” he says. “You have a totally different perspective on life from going through that journey.”


Every 10 minutes, someone is added to the organ transplant waiting list.

Approximately 113,000 men, women, and children are waiting for life-saving organ transplants. One organ donor has the power to save up to eight lives and change the outcomes of someone’s world forever by giving them a second chance. Additionally, tissue donation can save and improve the lives of up to 75 people with their gifts. You can make a huge impact by registering as an organ and tissue donor.

Learn more about organ and tissue donation, or register as a donor at https://donatelifewisconsin.org.


Impact Stories | Organ & Tissue Donation

 

Markesha Grayson

In December 1994, Markesha Grayson donated a kidney to her father, saving his life. As the longest living organ donor from Froedtert Hospital, she’s on a mission to spread the word about the importance of donation.
 

Tommy Bigwood

In the early hours of Friday, Feb. 24, 2023, Thomas “Tommy” Bigwood experienced cardiac arrest and was given no hope of recovery. His mother, Kim Cobb, made the decision to donate Tommy’s organs and tissues, and Tommy gave his heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and corneas to help others.
 

Dionne Griffin

Dionne’s health was growing worse as her kidneys began to fail. Thanks to a kind donor, she received the transplant she needed.
 

Jovan Wilder

Jovan Wilder was one day short of his 19th birthday when he was hit by a stray bullet and subsequently pronounced brain dead. A registered organ donor, Jovan donated his liver, kidneys and heart to give others a second chance at life.