Posts Tagged ‘Aaron Tanner’

Catered BBQ Dinner!

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Coldwell Banker Amaral & Associates is hosting a fundraising dinner, with all of the proceeds going to The Aaron Tanner Heart Foundation.

Please join us in helping to Save Aaron Tanner’s Broken Heart. 4-year-old Aaron Tanner is in need of a dual heart and kidney transplant. His need is urgent and your help is needed.

Please join us in this great cause at:  The Hanoum Estate located at 4790 Knarlwood Road, Oakley.

Events Planned for the evening:

  • BBQ Dinner catered by Mike’s Beef and Brew
  • Concert featuring The Crosstowne Band
  • Texas Holdem Poker Tournament
  • Silent auction and raffles.

Date:  September 23, 2009
Location: The Hanoum Estate
4790 Knarlwood Road, Oakley, CA
Time:  5:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Cost:  $50.00 per person

Poker Tournament is a $50.00 buy in, includes the cost of dinner.

For tickets and more information please contact
Noelle Young at:  (925) 759-7538

We encourage supporters to download, print and freely distribute fliers for this event.

In an article, which ran yesterday, August 26th, 2009 in the Brentwood Press, event organizers had this to say… 

Events supporting Aaron piling up
by Ruth Roberts

The most recently planned event is scheduled for Sept. 23 from 5 to 10 p.m. at the Hanoum Estate in Oakley. Mike and Vickey Fagan, owners of Mike’s Beef ‘n’ Brew, are co-organizers of the benefit, which will include a barbecue dinner, live music and a Texas hold ’em tournament. Tickets for the event are $50 and include dinner and a buy-in for the poker tournament.

“We expect this to be a great event,” said Mike. “It’s a gorgeous spot that the owners have generously donated, so we’re hoping to gather a lot of local sponsors and donations. We’re just going to do whatever we can to help this family who has stopped everything to save their son. We want to make things a little easier.”

When told of the upcoming event, Elizabeth said she continues to be overwhelmed by the public outpouring of support.

Prayer Warriors Needed!

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

There are a lot of things still up in the air where little Aaron’s health is concerned. He’s got a long hard battle ahead of him.

While the family, friends and voluneers are most grateful for the monetary donations and those who have come out to support the entire Tanner family – what Aaron needs more are your prayers.

A prayer warrier reaches out and touches God’s heart and can move mountians.  Those fervent prayers on his behalf are needed on a daily basis. However, I’m hoping we can encourage you to make a special effort to pray for Aaron for one-hour the day of his surgery. I’m certain the family would be comforted, knowing that someone is praying for Aaron during his heart transplant.

If you are praying for Aaron and/or you can commit to praying the day of his surgery, please respond to this post and let the family know you are supporting them and praying for Aaron’s heart.

“Dear Heavenly Father, You are intimately aware of the struggle Aaron Tanner is experiencing. Lord, we pray the Balm of Gilead over Aaron and his little body. We pray for strength in his heart muscles and valves. We pray for a total healing in his body, mind and spirit.

Lord we ask you to guide the doctors and the nurses as they minister to Aaron. We pray for strength for his family and success with the fundraising efforts. I know that You are able and that just like in Bible times, You can heal Aaron.

 Prayer Request Update

They are planning to move Aaron to UCLA, possibly as soon as Monday (September 28, 2009).

Elizabeth has been informed that the wait for a kidney and a heart can be as much as 100 – 190 days.  But that does not include the power of prayer even if it is. We will start that countdown in a couple days. Please pray they find a kidney and heart for Aaron quickly.

Status update

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Aaron could not go do the cath – last minute complications and decisions with him were made. The cath would have been too risky we were told with his standings at the moment they are going to do a separate procedure tomorrow where he will be completely sedated by the cardiac team, to get a partial look. If it looks safe, they will do the cath. It is for the best, but it was so last minute.

Preschooler in need of double transplant

Monday, August 10th, 2009
By Ruth RobertsAaron Tanner, 4, is in need of a heart and kidney transplant. He is currently undergoing tests and treatment at UCSF to stabilize his condition.<br><i>Photo courtesy of Laura Page</i>

Aaron Tanner, 4, is in need of a heart and kidney transplant. He is currently undergoing tests and treatment at UCSF to stabilize his condition.

Aaron Tanner is a cherub-faced 4-year-old with a shock of white-blond hair and a ready smile. On the surface, the Brentwood boy looks like any other high-spirited, carefree preschooler, but it’s there that the similarities end.

Aaron was born with a heart that functions only on the right side. The condition kept the newborn in the hospital for six weeks before he was declared strong enough for his parents, Elizabeth and Kevin Tanner, to take him home.

But only a week later, the Tanners’ 2-year-old son Ethan suddenly developed flu-like symptoms. Unable to calm the agitated toddler, they rushed him to the hospital, where he died a few hours later from a rare heart disease called Pertrophic Cardiomypathy; a typically genetic disease that often strikes without warning.

The Tanners now face yet another heartbreaking challenge: last week, doctors discovered that Aaron –who has undergone seven open-heart surgeries since he was born – must now undergo a simultaneous heart and kidney transplant. Renal failure has placed too much stress on the boy’s heart, and without the rare double-transplant surgery, Aaron’s chances of survival are low.

“Aaron is currently at UCSF undergoing tests as everyone just tries to figure out what they are up against,” said Laura Page, executive director of Kids Helping Kids, who recently heard of the Tanners’ plight. “This surgery is so rare that they have teams within teams of doctors working on this. We’re just trying to get the word out and do what we can to help.”

Help will be coming in part through a fundraiser, to be held sometime next month, that Page is organizing. According to Page, the Tanners’ medical bills are stacking up, and because of the debt they incurred with the death of Ethan, the family is facing foreclosure on their home.

“Aaron takes eight different medications a day to regulate his heart and blood pressure, and to prevent water from building up around his heart,” said Page in a recent e-mail. “Just one (of the medications) costs $7,000 a month. They have a cap on their insurance, which they are dangerously close to (before this recent hospital stay and proposed surgery). They really need our prayers and big miracles.”

Aaron and his mom are expected to remain at UCSF for the next few weeks as doctors develop a plan and Aaron undergoes kidney dialysis. He will also be given a medication designed to ease the blood flow and keep his blood pressure in check.

Despite her son’s dire situation, Elizabeth remains strong and optimistic.

“Aaron is in good spirits, as always,” she wrote in a blog earlier this week. “He is a bit sleepy, but is still able to give the staff a run for their money. We are waiting and praying. I can’t thank everyone enough for their support and prayers, blogs and notes of love and encouragement. It feels like our whole community is really pulling for us and I know God hears our prayers; you can feel it, it’s so evident in all that is happening.”

For those able to help the Tanner family, a few options are available: a fund has been set up at the Bank of Agriculture on Balfour Road in Brentwood.

Aaron Tanner’s War

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Read Aaron Tanner’s War, an article published in 110° Magazine.

A special thank you to the 110 Magazine in Contra Costa County,  for their article on Aaron Tanner and his War with his medical struggles. We look forward to an updated on Aaron’s progress and continuing battle for life, in a future issue.

Thank you 110 !