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CNN Names NANOE Member Ava Kaufman Nonprofit Hero

CNN Names NANOE Member Ava Kaufman Nonprofit Hero – Ava Kaufman, long time member of National Association of Nonprofit Organizations & Executives was fighting for her life twelve years ago. Now, thanks to a donor heart and successful organ transplant, she’s alive — and saving others. “My life changed on a dime,” said Kaufman, who was a professional dancer and black belt in taekwondo when an autoimmune disease went undiagnosed and wiped out her muscular system. She ultimately ended up on life support in intensive care with organ failure.

“I went from living this big life to not knowing how I was going to survive.”

This week Cable News Network (CNN) named Ava Kaufman one of their 2021 CNN Heroes. The program was started in 2007. Honorees are introduced during the fall of each year and the audience is encouraged to vote online for the CNN Hero of the Year. Ten recipients are honored and each receive US$10,000. The top recipient is chosen as the CNN Hero of the Year and receives an additional US$100,000 to continue their work. During the broadcast celebrating their achievements, the honorees are introduced by celebrities who actively support their charity work.

In what she calls a series of small miracles, Kaufman was given a second chance at life. On her birthday in 2009, she received a new heart and was put in a medically induced coma for two months. When she was brought out of the coma, she thought she was dying and promised God if she could live to raise her young daughter, she would do everything she could to give back. Today, Kaufman is doing just that.

After volunteering in Los Angeles hospitals and mentoring other transplant patients, Kaufman started the non-profit, Ava’s Heart. She and her organization offer transplant patients services that are often not covered by insurance, including food, gas, co-pays on medications, and housing.

“What I found out was that if you don’t have post-transplant housing, you can’t get listed,” Kaufman said.

CNN Names NANOE Member Ava Kaufman Nonprofit Hero

CNN Names NANOE Member Ava Kaufman Nonprofit Hero

She learned that for the nearly 110,000 people in the US waiting for a lifesaving organ transplant, it’s not just a matter of adding your name to the list. Patients often must show financial security and be able to afford transportation and housing near their transplant hospital. And for some — especially patients hoping to receive a transplant in a big city like Los Angeles, where rents are high and hotels are expensive — the cost alone could be a barrier.

Kaufman runs two housing locations — a home called Ava’s House and a three-bedroom apartment — where she houses up to five transplant patients and their families at a time, at no cost, after their surgery. This allows them to remain close to their transplant hospital for the duration of their aftercare, typically about three months. Acceptance to the program is need-based and there is a rolling acceptance based on what the organization can provide. Since she started, Kaufman has helped about 175 people with post-transplant housing, and about 150 more with support services and financial assistance. Her organization also helps donor families, which Kaufman says, “makes the whole circle complete.”

“When I first started Ava’s Heart, I got a call from a mom who said, ‘My son was killed in a drive-by and I knew that he would want to be an organ donor, so we donated his organs, and I don’t have money to cremate him. Will you help me?'”

Kaufman said there are other costs that donor families cannot afford, such as cremation and burial costs for their loved ones.

“One organ donor can save eight lives and then there’s tissue and skin and eyes and blood vessels and so many other things,” Kaufman said. “The donor is the whole story. Without the donor, there are no transplant centers, no transplant surgeons, no me. In my eyes, the donors are the heroes.” To date, Ava’s Heart has helped nearly 90 families with burial costs for their loved ones whose organs have saved countless lives, she said. Kaufman also works closely with organ procurement groups to build relationships with donor families and spread awareness about the importance of organ donation. At 71, Kaufman works out every day and has no plans to slow down.

“I feel like I was chosen to do this,” she said. “I have a mission. When I made a promise to God, I didn’t know what it was going to be, but it turned out to be my non-profit, Ava’s Heart.”

Want to get involved? Check out the Ava’s Heart website and see how to help. To donate to Ava’s Heart via GoFundMe, click here

 

CNN Names NANOE Member Ava Kaufman Nonprofit Hero was first posted at INSIDE CHARITY.

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Jimmy LaRose
Jimmy LaRose
Jimmy LaRose’s passion for “people who give” has inspired philanthropists around the world to change the way they invest in nonprofits. His belief that donors are uniquely positioned to give charities what they truly need – leadership rather than money – is the basis for his work with individuals, governments, corporations and foundations, in the U.S., Europe, Asia & Middle East. Jimmy, in his role as author, speaker, corporate CEO & nonprofit CEO champions all of civil society’s vital causes by facilitating acts of benevolence that bring healing to humanity and advance our common good. He and his beautiful wife Kristi are citizens of the Palmetto State where they make their home in Lexington, South Carolina.

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