Laci Boyd Wins Life After Rare intestine Transplant Following Denied Insurance Claims

USA: Laci Boyd’s long battle to survive after a catastrophic car crash culminated in a rare intestinal transplant at the Cleveland Clinic, ending months of dependence on an ostomy and daily IV nutrition. The procedure, one of roughly 97 intestine transplants performed nationally in a typical year, came after repeated insurance denials and a failed state legislative push that sought to give Oklahomans the right to sue insurers for bad-faith delays in care.

Boyd’s ordeal began after a family trip when her vehicle struck black ice, triggering multiple emergency operations that removed most of her small intestine. Left with short bowel syndrome and only about 35 inches of small bowel where most people have roughly 35 feet, she relied on an ostomy with frequent changes and twelve hours a day of intravenous nutrition (TPN), which severely constrained family life and mobility. The Cleveland Clinic emerged as one of the few centers offering intestinal transplantation as a viable path to restore digestive function.

Her path to surgery was obstructed by repeated insurer rejections that characterized the transplant as not sufficiently severe or experimental. That bureaucratic fight spurred lawmakers to draft a bill to allow people to sue insurers over bad-faith denials, but the measure did not pass. After persistent appeals, Boyd finally received approval in the summer of 2025. A suitable donor was procured, and surgeons completed a complex, roughly 12-hour intestinal transplant. Intensive coordination between the surgical team and her family during the operation preceded a successful transfer back home to Yukon, Oklahoma, where she has been recovering and no longer needs the ostomy or continuous IV therapy.

Her recovery has energized her family to advocate for others navigating similar battles with insurers and access to specialized transplants. The case highlights the scarcity and complexity of intestinal transplantation, the high stakes of insurance coverage for life-saving procedures, and the difference a referral to a specialized center like the Cleveland Clinic can make.


Video originally published on 2026-01-31 07:25:58


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