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Steve Jobs's Last Gift, A Life-Giving Gift, Becomes A Reality Today
steve jobs
steve jobs

iTech-BB.com

Steve Jobs was best known for imagining a better future and then organizing others to help him make that future happen.

Usually Jobs reserved this talent for gadgets and media.

But in 2009 and 2010, Jobs quietly put this skill toward saving lives.

In October 2010, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed into law a bill that made California the first state in the nation to create a live donor registry for kidney transplants. The bill also required California drivers to decide whether they want to be organ donors when they renew their driver licenses. According to one supporter, this second measure alone should double the number of organ transplants available in California.

The registry created by that bill opens today, following a news conference at 9 A.M. Pacific time.

You can see the website for it here.

The registry never would ever have happened without the help of Jobs.

In December 2008, Jobs shocked the media and worried friends by announcing that he would not deliver Apple's keynote at the upcoming 2009 Macworld Convention. Two weeks into the new year, the company and the CEO announced he would be taking a leave of absence in order to deal with a "hormone imbalance."

Here's what was really happening: Steve Jobs' liver was failing and he was learning that he needed to replace it or else he would die.

Around this time, Jobs began looking for a new liver. Unfortunately, he wasn't the only one doing so in California. In fact, over 3,400 Californians were waiting for a new liver in 2009. Only 671 got one. 400 died.

What Jobs probably did next was what most wealthy Americans with failing livers do in the same situation: travel around the U.S. and pay big fees to be examined by various doctors at various hospitals in order to get on as many waiting lists as possible.

This process is called multiple-listing. It's very time-consuming and expensive. One of the hospitals where Steve got listed required an interview with a doctor, an interview with a a social worker, and a complete and very invasive medical examination.

By early to mid-March: a miracle. One of the hospitals at which Steve had gotten listed reached him to say that they had a liver and that he was the best candidate to receive it via transplant. It was Methodist University Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

By December 2009 – and for what we now know was an all-too-brief interim – Steve Jobs' life seemed to all the world much like it was before he got sick.

The news and rumors about Apple were once more all about its latest gadgets and not the CEO's health.