CLAUDETTE’S Story
Claudette has worked as a nurse, midwife, and in human resources for an airline company. Living in Turks and Caicos, she is as dedicated to island life as she is to taking care of her family and friends.
One Sunday when she returned home from church, her son A.J., who was 18 at the time, was still in bed. That was unusual for him, but Claudette made him some food hoping to rouse him. A.J. did not eat anything and returned to bed. The next afternoon, she received a phone call at work; her daughter was unable to wake A.J., Claudette rushed home from her work at the hospital. Because they lived in a remote area, the ambulance would take too long to arrive, so Claudette lifted her son into her arms. To this day she still does not know how she got the strength, but she got A.J. in her car and took him to the hospital. At the hospital they discovered that they did not have the resources to treat A.J., so they med-evacuated to Nassau, the Bahamas, with Claudette, his sister, and father, following behind him on a separate flight.
Claudette remembers the nurse’s words so clearly: “His eyes are fixed and dilated.” She knew it meant her son was gone. She made the decision then to donate A.J.’s organs. She knew it was the right decision. What she didn’t know was that Laurel Welch had been transported to Florida, waiting for a new liver she desperately needed.
Because of Claudette’s decision during the most devastating moment in her life, Laurel received a new liver and got a second chance at life. “All A.J. ever wanted to do was live in the United States,” Claudette says, “and all his seven organs that were donated went to people in the U.S. so I guess his dream came true.”