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False /oidc-signin/en-ca/ Convatec Group Contact Us Brasil Brasil United States (English) United States (English) Estados Unidos (Español) Estados Unidos (Español) Argentina Argentina Canada (English) Canada (English) Canada (Français) Canada (Français) Chile Chile Colombia Colombia Ecuador Ecuador México México Perú Perú Belize Belize Guyana Guyana Jamaica Jamaica Venezuela Venezuela Costa Rica Costa Rica Curaçao Curaçao República Dominicana República Dominicana Guatemala Guatemala Honduras Honduras Nicaragua Nicaragua Panamá Panamá Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Suriname Suriname El Salvador El Salvador United Kingdom United Kingdom France France Deutschland Deutschland Italia Italia Україна Україна België België Česko Česko Danmark Danmark España España Ireland Ireland Nederland Nederland Norge Norge Österreich Österreich Polska Polska Schweiz (Deutsch) Schweiz (Deutsch) Slovensko Slovensko Suisse (Français) Suisse (Français) Portugal Portugal Suomi Suomi Sverige Sverige Türkiye Türkiye Ελλάδα Ελλάδα Россия Россия Bosna i Hercegovina Bosna i Hercegovina България България Eesti Eesti Hrvatska Hrvatska Magyarország Magyarország Ísland Ísland Lietuva Lietuva Latvija Latvija Северна Македонија Северна Македонија Malta Malta România România Srbija Srbija Slovenija Slovenija الإمارات العربية المتحدة الإمارات العربية المتحدة البحرين البحرين مصر مصر ישראל ישראל ایران ایران الأردن الأردن عُمان عُمان قطر قطر پاکستان پاکستان لبنان لبنان الكويت الكويت المملكة العربية السعودية المملكة العربية السعودية Suid-Afrika Suid-Afrika العراق العراق New Zealand New Zealand 日本 日本 Australia Australia India India Malaysia Malaysia Singapore Singapore 대한민국 대한민국 中国 中国 中国台湾 中国台湾 ไทย ไทย Indonesia Indonesia Việt Nam Việt Nam Philippines Philippines Hong Kong SAR China (English) Hong Kong SAR China (English) 中国香港特别行政区 (中文(简体,中国香港特别行政区)) 中国香港特别行政区 (中文(简体,中国香港特别行政区))

Rob Hill

Rob continues to break down barriers ;

Until 1994, Rob Hill had never been sick a day in his life. The 23-year-old amateur runner and adventurer, who completed his first marathon in the second grade, kept a rigorous training schedule.  Then, wracked by debilitating diarrhea, cramping, and pain, Rob was diagnosed with Crohn's disease with ulcerative colitis, inflammatory bowel diseases.

Over the next year and a half, Rob's condition worsened. His weight plummeted — from 185 pounds to his lightest recorded weight of 105 — and it became clear that his large intestine needed to be removed. "When it came down to losing my colon or losing my life, it wasn't a hard decision to make," he says.

It wasn't until he was sick that he learned an aunt also had suffered from Crohn's — a fact never shared with family members at the time. As far as Rob was concerned, "Life with an ostomy was my second chance and I was not going to waste it."

Eight years after his life-changing surgery, Rob decided to challenge the social stigma surrounding intestinal diseases and living with an ostomy.

Rob continues to break down barriers

He began a personal quest to become the first Crohn's patient and ostomate to climb the Seven Summits, or the tallest peak on every continent, and in doing so, raise awareness about living with IBD and an ostomy. Fewer than 300 people over the past 20 years have successfully scaled the Seven Summits, a feat that is hard on anyone, much less someone without their colon, responsible for absorbing water and nutrients into the body.

"It's okay to talk about these conditions and not something to hide behind."


Through his involvement with Convatec as the Global Ambassador to the Great Comebacks® Program and his own Intestinal Disease Education and Awareness Society (IDEAS), Rob has set an example that an ostomy is not as much about removing an internal organ as it is about second chances and the opportunity to pursue your dreams.

Today, Rob continues to break down barriers for people living with intestinal diseases, letting them know that "it's okay to talk about these conditions and not something to hide behind."

From being barely able to make it up a flight of stairs due to the debilitating effects of his condition, Rob has now completed all of the Seven Summits in his “No Guts Know Glory” campaign:

  •  June 2002, Mt. Elbrus, 18,481 feet (5,633 m), Russia/Georgia, Europe
  •  October 2003, Mt. Kilimanjaro, 19,339 feet (5,963 m), Tanzania, Africa
  •  January 2004, Aconcagua, 22,840 foot (6,962 m), Argentina, South America
  •  June 2005, Denali/Mt. McKinley, 20,320 feet (5,895 m), Alaska, U.S.A., North America
  •  January 2006, Vinson Massif, 16,067 feet (4,897 m), Antarctica
  • April 2007, Carstensz Pyramid, 16,023 feet (4,884 m), Indonesia, Oceania
  •  May 2010, South Summit of Mount Everest, 29,053 feet (8,850 m), located on the border of Nepal and Tibet, Asia

Blogs

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2024-11-28

Date Night With An Ostomy

Date Night With An Ostomy

Date Night with an Ostomy

Are you feeling nervous at the thought of date night after ostomy surgery? With a little planning ahead, you can be sure to have a great night out.

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2024-04-24

Fashion Tips For Living With An Ostomy

口を開けて笑う人

Fashion Tips for Living with an Ostomy

Just because you’ve had ostomy surgery, your wardrobe can still reflect your personal style.

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2024-04-24

Swimming with an Ostomy

プール内の人と子供

Swimming with an Ostomy

You can swim or be in the water while wearing your pouching system.

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2024-04-24

Managing Humidity

大きなカチューシャをつけて微笑む女性

Managing Humidity and Extending Ostomy Pouch Wear Times

 The me+ support team has put together some useful tips just for you to help optimize your pouch wear time.

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2024-04-24

Bathing with an Ostomy

プールの中の女性

Bathing and Showering

Showering and bathing with an ostomy should not interfere with your regular cleaning routine

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2023-10-19

me+ community

眼鏡をかけた男性

Randy Henniger 2011

When he was only 30 years old, recently married and the father of two boys, Randy Henniger was diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer.

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2023-10-19

me+ community

Lisa Becker

Lisa Becker

From the tender age of 13, Lisa Becker has lived with Crohn’s disease. Today, just over 20 years later, she is turning her years of adversity into her career passion with a “fashionable” business that caters to helping fellow ostomates feel more confident in everyday life.

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2023-10-19

me+ community

Alex Coe

Alexander Coe

Born in China, Alex Coe was left incontinent due to an imperforate anus that doctors tried to repair with a pull-through procedure. The procedure left Alex with complications that would not be resolved until the age of 10.

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2023-10-19

me+ community

白髪の男

Kent Cullen

Dr. Cullen was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis in 1968, a few years after he became a board certified colon and rectal surgeon, and underwent ileostomy surgery in 1983.

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2023-10-18

me+ community

頭飾りをかぶった人

Jearlean Taylor

At two years of age, Jearlean developed a rare form of cancer. Doctors feared she would not live to celebrate her third birthday. They performed a urostomy and colostomy on the toddler, and hoped for the best.

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