Brandy Hehn was a regular in the kidney dialysis unit at the Regina General Hospital when the deadly Humboldt Broncos bus crash happened five years ago.
Sixteen people died and 13 were injured after a transport truck went through a stop sign and into the path of a bus carrying the Saskatchewan junior hockey team on April 6, 2018.
Hehn, now 39, remembers a nurse walking into the room where she was getting a dialysis treatment a couple days later and commenting on the crash.
“I said, ‘No, I had no idea.’”
“Bless that family for what they’ve done in his honour,” he said in an interview.
The Logan Boulet Effect, said Shemie, continues to start conversations.
Logan’s father, Toby Boulet, said his family felt it was important to talk about his son’s donation from the beginning and it ballooned from there.
“Logan’s story has touched a lot of people,” he said. “It’s hard to believe it has been five years.”
Boulet added that Hehn’s T-shirt design for Green Shirt Day this year is “really cool” and her personal story is inspiring.
“She’s from Saskatchewan and she’s doing really well,” he said. “It can’t always be the Boulets saying the story. It’s got its own legs in all corners of the country and into the (United) States. That’s what we want.”
Hehn’s story started when she was having mysterious medical symptoms as a teenager.
“They kind of mimicked arthritis,” she explained. “My knees would swell up. I would be out at a party in Southey, Sask., and I would have to hang out in a car because I couldn’t move my legs.”
She had been diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes three years earlier.
By her early 20s, Hehn needed a liver transplant. She got one when she was 25.
Her kidneys didn’t do well as her liver was failing. Doctors told her to also expect a kidney transplant in the next decade.
“I started dialysis in 2016,” she said. “I had six percent kidney function.”
She worked during the day, then went to the hospital in the evenings for several hours three times a week.
In 2020, Hehn got a new kidney from a deceased donor.
“It is completely like a new life,” she said.
“When you hear (his family) talk about it firsthand, it’s the most heart-wrenching thing you will ever hear,” she said.
“We don’t know who Logan’s recipients are, but putting a face to a recipient … it’s important to show.”
Hehn said she’s inspired by the Boulets.
“As euphoric as it is to get a kidney,” she said, her voice breaking, “it pales in comparison to the pain you hear from them.