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Eugene Woman Gives Ultimate Gift: Whole Body Donation To Medical Science

Paula Olch (right) poses with her daughter Karen. Paula passed away on June 22, 2019. She became one of the first people to donate both her body and her brain to OHSU programs for medical research and education.
Karen Olch
Paula Olch (right) poses with her daughter Karen. Paula passed away on June 22, 2019. She became one of the first people to donate both her body and her brain to OHSU programs for medical research and education.

What will become of us when we die? For some, the answer may be immediate burial. A growing number of people want to be cremated. And- there is another after-death option-- WHOLE BODY donation. Oregon鈥檚 School of Medicine has a program which allows the deceased to become body donors for advanced medical education. KLCC鈥檚 Tiffany Eckert brings us this story of a Eugene woman whose final wish was to give, what some call, the 鈥渦ltimate gift.鈥

Paula Olch (right) poses with her daughter Karen. Paula passed away on June 22, 2019. She became one of the first people to donate both her body and her brain to OHSU programs for medical research and education.
Credit Karen Olch
Paula Olch (right) poses with her daughter Karen. Paula passed away on June 22, 2019. She became one of the first people to donate both her body and her brain to OHSU programs for medical research and education.

87 year-old Paula Olch knew what she wanted to happen after her death. Before the time came, her daughter Karen Olch, found all the paperwork to help make her mom鈥檚 wishes a reality.

鈥淒onating her body for medical research and education made total sense to her,鈥 Karen says. 鈥淪he was curious and thoughtful and kind and compassionate. And, to me it completely fit with who she was.鈥

Since 1976, more than 4,300 people have donated their bodies to  Oregon Health & Science University. The Body Donation Program provides hands-on opportunities for medical students and physicians to learn the foundations of anatomy and perfect surgical procedures.

Paula Olch lived in Eugene when she died from complications of Parkinson's Disease. She had already made plans (with her daughter's help) to donate her body and brain to science.
Credit Karen Olch
Paula Olch lived in Eugene when she died from complications of Parkinson's Disease. She had already made plans (with her daughter's help) to donate her body and brain to science.

In life, Paula Olch understood the importance of science. She had a degree in Biology from Stanford. Late in life, she became a massage therapist, putting her intimate knowledge of the human body to work. Thirteen years ago, Paula was diagnosed with Parkinson鈥檚 disease. When she died in June, Karen says her mom was among the first whole body donors to also donate to the OHSU Brain Bank.  

鈥淗er brain tissue is of vital importance in doing Parkinson鈥檚 research,鈥 Karen tells us. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 find things out when you鈥檙e alive with Parkinson鈥檚. Doctors just treat the symptoms. You don鈥檛 really know what鈥檚 going on with a Parkinson鈥檚 brain until after that person has passed.鈥

Karen is proud of her mom.

鈥淪he was not a person to call a lot of attention to herself,鈥 Karen recalls of her mother. 鈥淪he wasn鈥檛 a person to get up in front of people and say, 鈥業鈥檝e done this wonderful thing.鈥 After her death, she鈥檚 having such a huge impact in this quiet way.鈥

Tamara Ostervoss agrees. As director of OHSU鈥檚 Body Donation Program, she sees how much medical students learn during their year studying the bodies of donors.

鈥淚 think once they are in the anatomy lab,鈥 Ostervoss says, 鈥渁nd they do interact with the donor and they see how a textbook could not teach these things that they need to know. I think it really clicks for them then.鈥 

A choir sings during the private 2019 Service of Gratitude held in Portland for loved ones of body donors to OHSU programs.
Credit Tiffany Eckert
A choir sings during the private 2019 Service of Gratitude held in Portland for loved ones of body donors to OHSU programs.

People interested in donating their body should know there are steps to the process, including pages of consent paperwork. And it鈥檚 virtually impossible to confirm in advance that a person will be a body donor. At the time of death, a risk assessment must be performed to ensure a body does not carry a communicable disease or active infection.

Body donation doesn鈥檛 mean a family must forgo a funeral service for their loved one. Ostervoss says after a body donor鈥檚 teaching period ends, usually about three years, there are embalmers and crematory operators are on staff to help.

鈥淲e try to accommodate many different religions and many different personal preferences and wishes when it comes to final disposition,鈥 says Ostervoss.

Ostervoss says besides teaching the foundations of anatomy, each body donor helps med students grasp the complexities of life and death, sickness and health. And that has a ripple effect.

鈥淭hey do really take that knowledge with them and use it on every patient that they see for the rest of their career,鈥 Ostervoss says. 鈥淪o many people end up benefitting from this donation.鈥

Like a legacy.

鈥淒earest Stranger, I know very little about you. I know how many decades you lived. When your heart stopped beating and why.鈥

Emily Mitchell is a 2 nd year medical student. After spending a year together, she was moved to write a poem to her body donor.

鈥淏ut I don鈥檛鈥 know your name or your hometown or where you lived or how you spent your days or who you loved or who you hurt. Or what your eyes saw in the years you passed on this earth. Yet I do know that the human body, your body, is one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen.鈥

( hear flute playing Adagio in G minor)

Paula Olch (right) with daughter Karen.
Credit Karen Olch
Paula Olch (right) with daughter Karen.

Each year, OHSU students and faculty hold a private Service of Gratitude event to thank donors and their families for their selfless gifts. Poems are recited and music is performed, like this flute Adagio in G. minor played by a med student. Karen Olch attended the 2019 event in Portland in early December.

鈥淯m, I almost didn鈥檛 come to this because I thought well, what would it be? And, my mother was Paula,鈥 Karen tells the crowd. 鈥淎nd, I can just see her. She鈥檚 elated that you all are working with her so respectfully. And you know I can almost hear her saying, 鈥榗heck out my hip, here鈥檚 where I had a hip replacement!鈥 (hear laughter) I鈥檓 just very moved by this more than I can say.鈥

The Body Donation Program expects about 150 people will make the 鈥渦ltimate gift鈥 to medical science education at OHSU in 2020.

Reporter's note: Karen Olch is a volunteer music host at KLCC.

LISTEN BY CLICKING BELOW TO HEAR FULL COMMENTS BY KAREN OLCH AT OHSU SERVICE OF GRATITUDE 

LISTEN BY CLICKING AUDIO FILE BELOW TO HEAR FULL POEM RECITED BY OHSU MEDICAL STUDENT EMILY MITCHELL

  FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE BODY DONATION PROGRAM AT OHSU:

Credit Franny White

Eugene Woman Gives Ultimate Gift: Whole Body Donation To Medical Science

Link above to OHSU article about an amazing discovery from the anatomical study of body donors: possibly the oldest person to live with Situs Inversus. That's a congenital condition in which the major visceral organs are reversed or mirrored from their normal positions. 

Eugene Woman Gives Ultimate Gift: Whole Body Donation To Medical Science

Copyright 2019

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Tiffany Eckert is a reporter for KLCC, the NPR member station in Eugene, Oregon. Her reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.
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