Jamaican teen receives remote kidney transplant in US hospital first

For 12 years, Arianna Crockett navigated the challenges of chronic kidney disease, but a groundbreaking medical procedure at Florida’s Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital has given the 18-year-old a new lease on life. In what marks a first for the pediatric hospital, Crockett — a U.S.-born teen raised in Jamaica who was battling end-stage (Stage 5) kidney failure — successfully received a kidney from a remotely located living donor this past Wednesday.

The path to transplant began long before the historic procedure. Crockett first received her kidney disease diagnosis at age 6. After growing up and attending school through ninth grade at Jamaica’s Victory Academy, she moved to South Florida three years ago to complete high school, as her health gradually declined. In January of this year, her kidneys completely failed, forcing her onto a rigid schedule of dialysis three times each week to stay alive.

Last year, her desperate search for a donor made headlines both in Jamaica and the U.S. Her mother, Tracy Evans, publicly pleaded for a compatible living donor to step forward, saying at the time, “We remain strong and trust God that there is a kidney for her.” That prayer was answered by Sara Goodall, a 40-year-old mother and the wife of Crockett’s cousin, who agreed to donate one of her kidneys despite living across the country from the teen.

On the morning of the transplant, surgeons removed Goodall’s kidney at her local hospital hundreds of miles from South Florida. The organ was then flown by air to Crockett’s South Florida location, where surgical teams at Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital were waiting to implant it into the teen Wednesday evening. This cross-country remote donor process marks the first time such a procedure has ever been completed at the hospital, setting a new precedent for future pediatric transplant cases.

In interviews leading up to the surgery, both recipient and donor described the same mix of emotions, calling themselves “nervous-cited” — a blend of anxious nerves and excited anticipation. Just hours before her transplant, during her final dialysis session, Crockett reflected on how surreal the moment felt after years of waiting. “It’s very surreal, and nerve-wracking. So I’m nervous-cited, nervous and excited,” she told local outlet the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

For Goodall, the decision to donate came down to giving the teen the second chance she had worked so hard for. She shared that she has long admired Crockett’s persistent positive outlook on life despite her years of health struggles, and jumped at the chance to give her the opportunity to live a life free of constant dialysis. The successful procedure not only changes Crockett’s future, but also opens new doors for organ transplant access for patients waiting for life-saving matches across the country.