

13 people die every day waiting for an organ transplant. If not for two donor families, my wife Heather could have been one of those 13.






Combine a super personable individual with some crazy health challenges, and you have people lined up to tell the story. Here are some articles written about Heather. Click on a title to expand.
Dubuquer gets heart: after 40-day wait; Neal in recovery
by Susan B. Gwiasda
January 9, 1995 • Dubuque Telegraph Herald
When Heather Neal’s physician asked Sunday if she had plans for the evening, the 21-year-old rural Dubuque woman said she was open to suggestions.
Fifteen hours later Heather was in the intensive care unit, recovering from a heart transplant operation.
After she had spent 40 days at St. Marys Hospital, Rochester, a compatible donor heart was located for Heather Sunday evening.
At 4 a m. today, the transplant operation began, finishing at 7 a.m, today.
“The heart’s in and working well,” said Dr. Chris McGregor, the surgeon who operated.
Heather Neal became sick in the fall of 1993 following a bout with walking pneumonia. In October of that year, she was rushed to the emergency room after having difficulty breathing. The Neals were shocked by Heather’s diagnosis — congestive heart failure.
A virus had made its way to her heart causing it to enlarge and fluid to collect in her lungs. A series of medications to strengthen the heart during the next several months were ineffective. Finally Heather was placed on the waiting list for a donor heart.
For Heather’s parents, Rose and Walter Neal, the new heart is just the beginning of their daughter’s recovery.
“We’re not out of the woods just yet,” Rose Neal. “We’ve got lots to go. There will be ups and downs.”
Yet the family was pleased by the good compatibility. “I feel good,” Walter Neal said. “I’m glad the wait is over. Now we see the light at the end of the tunnel.”
Heather’s surgery finished as the first light of morning was visible through the waiting room windows.
After waiting up most of the night, the Neal family — including an assortment of relatives who rushed to the hospital, expressed relief at the surgeon’s report.
“I’m tired though,” Walter Neal said as he headed down the hospital corridor in search of coffee. “Very tired.”
Heather’s expected to remain in the hospital for 12 days following the surgery.
The Mayo Clinic, which has an association with St. Marys Hospital, has been doing heart transplants for five years. Heather was the 84th patient to receive another heart.
Neal 'feels pretty good'
by Susan B. Gwiasda
January 10, 1995 • Dubuque Telegraph Herald
A day after her heart transplant operation, Heather Neal was conscious and speaking to her parents.
“She feels pretty good,” said Rose Neal, Heather’s mother. “We’re talking to her for the first time. Her throat is a little sore.”
Heather, 21, of rural Dubuque, has been waiting for a new heart since she was admitted to St. Marys Hospital, Rochester, at the end of November. Late Sunday evening, after 40 days in the hospital, a compatible donor heart was found.
The surgery was completed in three hours, finishing at 7 a.m. Monday. “They are pleased with everything,” Rose Neal said.
Neal has been sick since the fall of 1993 An apparent viral infection caused her heart to enlarge and fluid to collect in her lungs. After a year of taking medications, Neal was placed on a waiting list for a heart transplant.
Mayo Clinic, which has an association with St Marys Hospital, has a 90-95 percent one-year survival rate for heart transplant patients. Neal is the 84th patient to receive a new heart through Mayo.
Heart recipient released
by Susan B. Gwiasda
January 25, 1995 • Dubuque Telegraph Herald
Following a heart transplant and 53 days in intensive care, Heather Neal, 21, of rural Dubuque, was allowed to leave St. Marys Hospital, Rochester, Minn., on Sunday.
Neal will stay in the Rochester area for 90 days while she recovers from the operation. She will receive treat-ment on an outpatient basis, including weekly biopsies to detect infection or rejection of her new heart.
Neal entered the hospital Nov. 29 after being diagnosed with congestive heart failure a year earlier. She hud undergone drug therapy with disappointing results and was placed on the waiting list for a donor heart.
Neal received a new heart Jan. 9 in a three-hour operation.
Walter and Rose Neal, Heather’s parents, were with their daughter during the procedure and recovery. They say she is doing well.
“Heather is glad to be moving on, said Rose Neal.
One of Heather Neal’s first requests after surgery was a meal from Taco Bell.
While she experienced reactions to medication immediately after the surgery, Neal has regained her appetite.
There are several benefits being planned in Dubuque and St. Catherine during February to help defray costs of the heart transplant operation and associated expenses. The operation alone is estimated to top $200,000.
A heart for Heather
by Susan B. Gwiasda
June 25, 1995 • Dubuque Telegraph Herald
Bloomington woman carries on, finds humor in 20 years of medical crises

Heather Davis shows a stained glass dove that she made in recreational therapy as she awaited her second heart transplant and her first kidney transplant at Mayo Clinic in 2011. Heather and her husband, Brian, remain upbeat despite Heather’s more than 20 years of medical crises.
by Paul Swiech
December 4, 2015 • Bloomington Pantagraph
Heather Davis has an unusual sense of humor.
Like the time she slipped and broke both ankles and her reaction was to laugh.
Or the time when she was diagnosed with aggressive ovarian cancer and her response was “I know!”
Or when she’s asked to do something she doesn’t want to do and her reply is “No, I have cancer.”‘ Pause. Then she does it.
When you have had congestive heart failure, gallbladder removal, a near-death experience, two heart transplants, kidney dialysis, a kidney transplant, breast cancer, two broken ankles and aggressive ovarian cancer, a dark sense of humor is not just understandable. It’s lifesaving.
“I tell people, you always have a choice,” Heather, 42, said in the kitchen of her Bloomington home, with her husband, Brian, sitting beside her, a basket full of at least 35 medicines that she takes each day on the table in front of her and the Davises’ three cocker spaniels vying for her attention.
“I can bitch and moan about it or I can make light of it,” she said. “I choose to make light of it.”
“After all these years (of bad medical news), we’re kind of numb to it,” admitted Brian, 41, her husband of 11 years.
“It’s us,” Heather said with a smile. “It’ll happen.”
“Her circumstances are exceptional,” said her medical oncologist, Dr. Pankaj Kumar of Illinois CancerCare in Bloomington.
“She is very tough,” Kumar said. “She finds humor in all of this, which is incredible.”
“She is so young,” he continued. “She is facing mortality issues that most people face in their 80s. But she is upbeat and is smiling, which has helped her to continue to move from one condition to another condition.”
Heather — a Dubuque, Iowa, native — went from an active, volleyball-playing 20-year-old one month to gasping for breath the next month. She was rushed to a hospital and found to have congestive heart failure.
“I was a little freaked.”
She was rushed to Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., where she was diagnosed with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy, an abnormality of the heart muscle.
“My heart is too big and they don’t know why,” Heather explained.
Medications didn’t help so Heather became a candidate for a heart transplant in late 1994.
Along the way, gallstones were discovered so her gallbladder was removed. The surgery was needed before a heart transplant to reduce the risk of infection.
Her transplant was Jan. 8, 1995. Three months after the transplant, she returned home and three months later she returned to work.
“I felt good. I resumed a normal life.”
Until 2004, when — shortly after she and Brian wed and they were living in Appleton, Wis. — she found a lump in her left breast.
“The doctor came in and said ‘You have breast cancer. I said, ‘You’re kidding me.’ How can I survive a heart transplant only to get breast cancer?”
Mayo confirmed the diagnosis. “They had to take the entire breast,” she said. Then she had chemotherapy, whose side effects included hair loss.
“Two things I liked about myself were my hair and my cleavage and I ended up losing them both.”
Heather went on Tamoxifen, which is prescribed for women with advanced or early breast cancer.
“I was 31 and I was going through menopause and hot flashes,” she said. “I wanted kids and when I realized I couldn’t have them, I was pretty upset.”
In early 2010, she passed out at work and was rushed to the emergency department.
“I was listening outside the door and I heard them say ‘We don’t have anything’ (a pulse) and I heard them yelling at her,” Brian recalled.
After Heather’s heart rhythm was restored, she was rushed to a hospital in Madison, Wis., where it was discovered that the left side of her heart wasn’t pumping correctly. She was told to go home and get her affairs in order.
“I was really pissed off,” Heather said. She went to Mayo, where a doctor told her that death wasn’t imminent. Her ejection fraction, which measures how well a heart is pumping blood, had declined from 62 to 32 percent in two months. He advised her to slow down.
But by October 2010, she couldn’t breathe. Again, she was rushed to Mayo, where she was put on oxygen and her ejection fraction was found to be 10 percent.
“I was told that I was looking at another heart transplant and also, my kidneys weren’t working, so I was looking at a kidney transplant,” Heather recalled. “I said ‘Holy crap, not again.””
By Jan. 3, her condition was so bad that she was admitted to Mayo as an inpatient. She underwent kidney dialysis and, while she was waiting, did recreational therapy, which included making a stained glass dove.
On July 27, 2011, she had her second heart transplant and her kidney transplant. She left Rochester on Oct. 27, only to break both ankles when she slipped down a step.
“We just started laughing,” Heather recalled. “This is so us.”
After ankle surgery, she moved back in with her parents because Brian had relocated to Bloomington after starting a new job. She joined him in May 2012.
In spring 2015, she was walking when she detected a lump in her left groin. She went to Mayo for tests.
“A doctor told me ‘It’s cancer.’ I said ‘I know.'”
Heather was diagnosed with an aggressive form of ovarian cancer. “They removed a tumor the size of baseball.”
Back in Bloomington, Heather began chemotherapy in July under the direction of Kumar, in consultation with Mayo.
To reduce the risk of her body rejecting her transplanted organs, Heather takes medication to suppress her immune system. That same medication suppresses her body’s ability to fight cancers, Kumar explained.
“If you are on immuno-suppressant medications, you have a higher propensity to get cancer,” he said. “She is likely to have these types of problems. It’s unfair.”
Chemo side effects were harsh.
“My body couldn’t take it,” she said. So her therapy was adjusted so she does two rounds of chemo and has two weeks off.
This month, she returns to Mayo for tests to determine whether she’s done with chemo or needs more.
“I still go to work,” she said of her job as art department head at Hobby Lobby. “I still do my job.
“I don’t remember what it’s like to be healthy. I’m looking forward to going to work and not being exhausted.”
Brian said, “I don’t know how she does it.”
“Now that Heather has gone through surgery and chemotherapy, we will continue to monitor her closely and we’ll remain optimistic and continue to fight,” Kumar said.
“It’s all in the way you deal with things,” Heather said. “I try to stay positive. That’s always who I’ve been.”
“Heather has successfully managed this and I think that’s why she’s doing well,” Kumar said. “I have learned a lot about life from Heather,” Kumar said. “I feel blessed to have been able to take care of her.”
Heather's self-penned obituary
February 18, 2018 • Dubuque Telegraph Herald
Heather Lynn Davis told this world to get lost on Friday, February 16, 2018.
She was born on July 28, 1973, and adopted shortly thereafter by Walter and Rose Neal. Turns out you really can choose your family. Upon realizing that she’d proven that piece of conventional wisdom wrong, she decided to make proving the world wrong her life’s goal.
Well, that and becoming Mrs. Donnie Wahlberg. You can’t always get what you want.
She graduated from Wahlert High School and Northeast Iowa Community College. In a moment of apparent weakness, she married Brian Davis on April 17, 2004, and upon realizing her mistake, adopted three fur babies of her own: Bob, Gordon and Chuck.
She liked musicals, bad movies and TV procedurals. She loved to cross stitch and read. She was into Chinese food, wine and her mom’s pie. She liked making the house look like Santa threw up each December. In much the same way some people buy underwear, she bought purses. She worked in a bakery but still liked donuts. She went to Mexico. She went to Hawaii. She went to Spain. (She did not go to Oklahoma). Like many kids her age, she became obsessed with New Kids On The Block and Janet Jackson. Unlike many kids her age, she got to meet them, and the aforementioned Donnie Wahlberg palmed her head like a basketball. It was difficult to get her to wash her face after that. She transcribed doctors’ notes at a mental health clinic, ran the art department for a craft store and liked the people at her cancer center so much, she went to work there.
Yeah, she had cancer — three times, and two of those times, she wrestled it to the ground, gave it a noogie and made it cry “uncle.” She also had two heart transplants and a kidney transplant. She spent entire years of her life in hospital rooms, convalescent areas and doctor waiting rooms. She did not complain. Much.
And she loved The Lion King. Like, really loved it. Like, had multiple copies and pretty much every tchotchke that had a Simba on it. (She also loved the word “tchotchke”).
Heather loved her family, and just about everyone became family. She fiercely loved her parents. She adored her brother Phillip, his wife Crystal and their children and grandchildren. (Especially the grandchildren). She loved her in-laws, Kim and Laura Davis, her sisters-in-law, Amy, Sara, Beth, Katherine, Lizzie, Elizabeth’s husband Dustin and their boy, Sterling. She treasured the women who became her sisters, Julie, Lora, Shannon and Tina, their husbands and children.
She loved and missed those who went before her: her grandparents, Horacio and Rose Gonzales and Wesley and Nellie Neal; many aunts and uncles; and her Baby Dordon.
She admired and was grateful to her doctors, nurses and staff at Finley Hospital, the Mayo Clinic, and Gift of Life Transplant House in Rochester, Minnesota.
She tolerated her husband.
In keeping with her wishes, there will be no visitation or services. Those things creeped her out.
One last thing: Heather apologizes for referring to herself in the third person in this obituary.
Wearing our hearts on our sleeves: Heather's girls

Lora Neyens (from left), of Dubuque, Tina Berning of Hazel Green, Wis., and Julie Haugen, of Dubuque, all have four-leaf clover tattoos in honor of their late friend, Heather Davis.
by Erica Lyons
July 28, 2019 • Dubuque Telegraph Herald
While Heather Davis was awaiting one of her two heart transplants, her best friends decided to get her a small, silver heart-shaped necklace.
The necklace, which was actually a locket, had etched “our hearts are always with you” on it. When it was opened, it revealed a four-leaf clover shape.
Little did Tina Berning, of Hazel Green, Wis., and Julie Haugen and Lora Neyens, both of Dubuque, know at the time that the necklace would end up inspiring a permanent image on all three of the women.
The motivation for getting a four-leaf clover tattoo came after Davis’ death in February 2018. She had battled multiple types of cancer over her adult life along with undergoing three separate organ transplants and a broken bone or two every so often also in that time.
The women had been friends for close to 30 years, Neyens explained, adding that she “never had a great desire to get a tattoo.” But after Davis’ death, “a tattoo now had meaning.”
“I’m proud when people get to see it,” she said. “It was the right move.”
The group discussed getting tattooed together before, but due to Davis’ illness and inability to get one, Haugen said, the idea was “put aside for a while.”
Tattoos came back to mind when going through some of Davis’ belongings after her death, Berning added.
“That’s when we found the locket,” she said. “And that was really like ‘We get it. We’re supposed to get them.’”
Each woman’s design is slightly different, something the group said is meant to represent their own individuality while remaining a unit.
“For me the tattoo is two-fold,” Berning said. “To me, the tattoo, yes, is about Heather because she’s just as much a leaf as the rest of us, but it’s just to show that it’s hard to find a friendship like this, and we have that.
“And she’s still our friend, even though she’s not sitting in here with us. She’s still our friend, and she will always be a part of my life.”
Haugen echoed Berning’s remarks, adding that the one-in-a-million personality and strength of Davis is also evoked in their tattoos.
“There’s no comparison to Heather,” she said. “There’s no other person in the world I think who went through what she went through, so I guess I feel like it’s unique like her.”
Neyens added, “It’s a symbol to me of Heather, but (also) of all four of us, and I am so proud of our friendship and our relationship. It’s something I don’t think I could live without at this point.”
For the trio, their tattoos are another way to keep Heather’s memory alive by serving as a conversation piece to introduce others to her.
“It’s fun to talk about her,” Neyens said. “I look forward to the opportunity when something comes up and I have an opportunity to tell someone about her.”
“Heather’s girls” said they don’t plan to add to their tattoos, though their ink will last forever as they expect their friendship will.
“We’re stuck with each other,” Neyens said jokingly. “We tease that we know too much about each other to stop being friends, so there’s just no other option.”