Derrick Morris Explained

Derrick Morris
Birth Date:24 March 1930
Death Date:30 July 2005 (aged 75)
Nationality:British
Occupation:Supervisor at Swansea Docks
Known For:Longest surviving heart transplant recipient 2005 (25 years)

Derrick Morris (24 March 1930 – 30 July 2005) was, at the time of his death, Europe's longest-surviving heart transplant recipient, living 25 years after the transplant performed by Sir Magdi Yacoub in 1980. He died from an illness that was not heart or transplant related.

Morris had his first heart attack in 1975 and was told to expect to live only months. He became an active campaigner against heart disease, an advocate of organ donation as well as a symbol of the success of organ transplantation.

Early life and illness

Derrick Morris was born on 24 March 1930.[1] He was from Swansea in Wales,[2] and was working as a supervisor at Swansea Docks when he suffered his first heart attack in 1975.[3] He was given only a 15% chance of survival, and was told to "live six months at a time".[4]

Heart surgery

Morris was initially sceptical when a heart transplant was suggested but was persuaded by his doctor. He recalled, "we were told of the dangers. Because transplant work was in its infancy, the chances of survival were slim. But I decided for the family's sake to go ahead."[3] His surgeon Magdi Yacoub later commented that Morris's transplant helped shape public opinion: "Most importantly, Derrick went on to show that transplantation was a good thing."[3]

The operation took place on 23 February 1980 at Harefield Hospital and was Yacoub's third such procedure[5] [6] and one of 14 performed at Harefield that year, following an initial moratorium on heart transplant procedures and before the introduction of cyclosporin.[7] The procedure had been discontinued in 1973 due to poor results.[8] The donor was a 26-year-old woman who had been killed in a car crash.[4] After the operation, Morris eventually returned to work at the docks. He was the eleventh person in the UK to receive a heart transplant.

It was argued that the cost of the operation was not money well spent because the National Health Service would have been better to spend it on preventing heart disease rather than doing transplants. Several people who had transplants at Harefield died while Morris was recovering.

Morris's fate became intertwined with the largely transformative transplant success of Yacoub.[9]

Later life

By the 20th anniversary of his operation, Morris already held the European survival record.[10] [11] [12] The longest heart transplant survivor in Britain before Morris's surgery was Keith Castle, who had surgery performed by Sir Terence English in August 1979 at Papworth Hospital.[13] In conjunction with celebrating his two decades of postoperative life, Morris said his heart disease was serious and debilitating, noting: "Twenty years ago I was a complete invalid. I couldn't even walk. In February 1980 Yacoub gave me my new heart and since then I have come on in leaps and bounds." This enabled him to travel to a number of countries, including making five journeys to the United States, and see his grandchildren grow up. These were all experiences that would not have been possible without the transplant.[10] [14]

By 2000, Harefield ran the largest heart and lung transplant programme in the world. Yacoub and his team went on to perform more than 3,000 heart and heart–lung transplants.[10]

Morris retired at the age of 65 and outlived his wife Beryl.[3] When 25 years arrived, Morris expressed surprise: "It was an anniversary I thought I would never get to."[15] In July 2005, Morris joined 1,000 other people who had survived heart and lung transplant operations at a celebration at Harefield Hospital to mark 25 years of transplant surgery. He was Harefield and Europe's longest surviving recipient.[2] Just weeks before his death, he participated in a stroll along Swansea Bay to raise funds for heart disease research.[4]

Death and legacy

Morris died from a flu-like illness on 30 July 2005 at the age of 75, six months after the 25th anniversary party.[3] [16] By then, he had three grandchildren.[17] [18]

His long lasting legacy was that: "Most importantly, Derrick went on to show that transplantation was a good thing", said Yacoub. Morris is said to have been instrumental in a sea change in public opinion about this type of surgery. Morris promoted campaigns to fight heart disease and was effectively both a benchmark and a "poster child" for signing up potential organ donors.[4] His survival and his lifetime example was called a transplant medicine "inspiration" by Yacoub.[18] His successful operation and prolonged survival had a profound effect on public opinion relative to heart transplants.

His longevity record was later surpassed by John McCafferty, who became Britain's longest surviving heart transplant recipient by 2013 at the age 73.[19]

References

Citations

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: McWhirter . Norris . Peter . Matthews . Middlesex, England. Guin: Book of Records '93. October 1992. Guinness World Records Limited. 978-0-85112-978-5. 68 .
  2. Web site: Heart transplant recipient celebrates 25th anniversary. 15 July 2005. The Northern Echo. en. 22 April 2019.
  3. Web site: Record survivor of heart transplant dies. Richard . Savill. The Daily Telegraph. 2 August 2005. 21 April 2019.
  4. http://heartzine.com/news/longest_surviving_heart_transplant_patient_has_died.html Heartzine.com "Longest-surviving Heart Transplant Patient Has Died", 4 August 2005. Accessed 21 February 2013
  5. News: Presentation speech for Sir Magdi Yacoub for the honorary degree of Doctor of Medicine of the University honoris causa. Cawthorne. Mike. March 2015. University of Buckingham. 21 April 2019.
  6. Web site: Derrick Morris. To Transplant and Beyond. 28 November 2016. 6 September 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180906024153/http://www.heart-transplant.co.uk/derrick.html. dead.
  7. Alivizatos. Peter A.. January 2019. Sir Magdi H. Yacoub, the Leonardo da Vinci of cardiac surgery. Proceedings (Baylor University. Medical Center). en. 32. 1. 146–151. 10.1080/08998280.2018.1532247. 30956614. 6442908.
  8. Web site: 1970s . The number of heart transplants declined sharply due to difficulties in keeping the recipient alive long term – from 99 across the world in 1968 to 47 in 1969, 17 in 1970 and 9 in 1971. In 1973 the then Chief Medical Officer met with Donald Ross and other leading surgeons and doctors in the field, and they agreed to halt human transplants until more research had been done. . Fifty Years of Heart Transplant . . 20 April 2019.
  9. Web site: 1981 . Fifty Years of Heart Transplant. British Heart Foundation . 21 April 2019.
  10. Web site: Transplant man celebrates 20th anniversary . . 10 February 2000 . 20 April 2019.
  11. Web site: Magdi Yacoub. 24 March 2009. Arabian Business. ArabianBusiness.com. en. 21 April 2019.
  12. Encyclopedia: Yacoub, Magdi (1935–) . International Encyclopedias almanacs transcripts and maps . 24 April 2019.
  13. Halfman. M. A.. June 1982. Britain's longest living heart transplant patient: Keith Castle. Focus On AACN. 9. 3. 24. 7047220.
  14. Web site: Anniversary for transplant patient . 22 February 2002 . I've been practically around the world on holiday and I've got a wonderful family and three wonderful grandchildren who I wouldn't have seen otherwise," said Mr Morris. . 22 April 2019. BBC News.
  15. Web site: 'Pioneer' heart patient, 75, dies. 1 August 2005. 21 April 2019. BBC News.
  16. Web site: Longest-living heart transplant patient dies . walesonlink.co.uk . 31 March 2013 . 19 April 2019.
  17. Web site: Heart-swap champion goes globetrotting. 24 June 2004. WalesOnline. 20 April 2019.
  18. Web site: Heart op man celebrates 25 years . 23 February 2005 . BBC News.
  19. Web site: 1982 . Fifty Years of Heart Transplant . . 20 April 2019.