Showing posts with label donor registration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label donor registration. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Families urged to join Organ Donor Register

With 3 people dying every day in the UK and 18 dying in the US while waiting for an organ or tissue transplant this article is a good reminder of the importance of registering to be a donor and encouraging your friends and family to do likewise. Register to be a donor at the bottom of this post.


By Helen Rae, Evening Chronicle, ChronicleLive.co.uk

FAMILIES in the region are being encouraged to take the time to have a ‘Heart to Heart’ discussion about organ donation.

With three people dying every day while waiting for an organ, NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) is calling for people to think seriously about joining the Organ Donor Register.

In the North East 26% of the population have signed up, meaning 809,184 people have become part of the NHS-based register.

Themed as Heart to Heart, National Transplant Week, which runs until this Sunday, gives people the chance to sit down with their friends and relatives to talk about the issue.

The importance of organ donation is highlighted by the remarkable story of Claire Crozier and her brother Peter Dobing.

Claire, 34, was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy four years ago and doctors at Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital said she urgently needed a new heart.

The mother-of-two had a transplant in 2006, but she suffered a major blow when her older brother, Peter, was diagnosed with the same condition.

Peter, who works in customer services, underwent a heart transplant last year at the same hospital, carried out by the same surgeon who treated his sister.

Claire, of Gosforth, said: “I would like to say a big thank you to everyone who has already signed up to the Organ Donor Register – it is a remarkable thing to do.

“It means so much to me and my family that both Peter and I had the opportunity to continue our lives because we were given heart transplants.

“I encourage as many people as possible to sign up – it really does save lives.”

A Heart to Heart downloadable meal pack is available to get people talking together about organ donation over a tasty meal.

It includes recipes devised by TV chef Lawrence Keogh who had a kidney transplant in 2000.

He said: “Having had a kidney transplant myself, I know the difference it can make.

“I urge everyone to get involved in Transplant Week by having a Heart to Heart conversation with their loved ones and thinking about whether you would be willing to sign the Organ Donor Register.”

Anthony Clarkson, assistant director of organ donation and transplantation, said: “We’ve seen a big rise in the number of people in the UK signing up but it’s still not enough – three people are still dying every day.

“So make sure you download the meal pack, tell your family and friends to do the same, and please take two minutes to support Heart to Heart week by signing up today.”

For more information or to download the Heart to Heart meal pack, visit http://www.organdonation.nhs.uk/transplantweek


“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Register to be an organ and tissue donor & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network. NEW for Ontario: recycleMe.org - Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today! For other Canadian provinces click here
In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov
In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register
In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register
Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants (see allotransplantation). One tissue donor can help 75 to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ or tissue transplant. Organs can save lives, corneas renew vision, and tissue may help to restore someone's ability to walk, run or move freely without pain. Life Begins with You

Monday, January 04, 2010

Thank you for caring

As we enter another new year I would like to thank the individuals and donor families who helped to save the lives of thousands of people around the world by donating blood, bone marrow or organs and tissues for transplantation.

Also, a huge thanks to those who have taken the time to register to be an organ and tissue donor. But the need is still desperate because there are far more people on the waiting lists for a life-saving transplant than there are donors.

If you haven't already registered to be an organ and tissue donor why not make it a resolution to do it this year? The links are below. Thanks.

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Register to be an organ and tissue donor & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network. NEW for Ontario: recycleMe.org - Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today! For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register

In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ or tissue transplant.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Massachusetts Organ Donation Registry Opens Online

Congratulations to the State of Massachusetts for establishing an online donor registry for organ donation. In today's world of high-tech many jurisdictions around the globe are embracing online registries in an effort to increase the rate of organ donation and save many more lives. Right now, 18 people in the U.S. die each day while waiting for an organ or tissue transplant.

By Elizabeth Cooney Boston Globe

For more than 20 years Massachusetts drivers have been able to register as organ donors when they renewed their driver's licenses. Now there's another way for them to let their wishes be known.

The New England Donor Registry of Donate Life New England allows adults to register as organ donors and specify which organs or tissues they are willing to give after their death, a choice not available through the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles.

The online registry, which went live earlier this week, will not replace the state's program, but will create another way to potentially boost donations and transplants.

"People's expectations are 'I should be able to sign up online for anything,' so we're simply trying to be as accommodating as possible to people who want to sign up," said Sean Fitzpatrick, a spokesman for the New England Organ Bank, which has created the registry with LifeChoice Donor Services of Connecticut and Western Massachusetts and the Connecticut Eye Bank.

In Massachusetts, 41 percent of drivers are registered donors, a rate above the national average of 38 percent. But the average includes states whose driver licensing agencies don't have donor registries, and Massachusetts ranks just 32nd among states with registries. Half of the states with registries open for five years -- long enough for licenses to be renewed -- have donor rates above 50 percent.

In New England, the rate is 38 percent, not including Vermont, which is planning to start a program for drivers to register as donors, and New Hampshire, which began its driver registration program in February. As in other states, drivers in Vermont and New Hampshire could indicate their willingness to be an organ donor on their licenses, but being listed in a donor registry had not been part of the program.

More than 100,000 people in the country are waiting for a transplant, including 3,400 in New England, but there were just under 28,000 organ transplants nationally last year.

Registering for organ donation can also help family members whom potential donors leave behind when they die.

"If somebody is signed up as a donor through the registry, we work to see their wishes are fulfilled," Fitzpatrick said. "We have found that the next of kin are very appreciative when they find out the deceased had made the decision. That way they are not the ones that are left having to make decisions that they might not really know how the deceased felt about. To make this decision now is oftentimes helpful to the next of kin."

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network. NEW for Ontario: recycleMe.org - Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today! For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register

In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ or tissue transplant.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Georgia Launches New Online Organ and Tissue Donor Registry

By launching an on-line organ and tissue donor registry the state of Georgia joins a growing number of U.S. states and other jurisdictions that have also taken this initiative to help increase the rate of organ donation. To find out how to register in your state go to ShareYourLife.org

Savannah Tribune

LifeLink of Georgia, the non-profit organ recovery agency, in partnership with the Georgia Department of Driver Services and Donate Life Georgia, a non-profit coalition of the state’s organ, tissue and eye donation and transplantation programs and other organizations with an interest in organ, tissue and eye donation announce the launch of the State’s new web-based organ and tissue donor registry.

The newly enacted Georgia Revised Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA), also known as Senate Bill 405, allows residents to legally designate their wish to save lives as an organ and tissue donor from the comfort of their home by visiting www.donatelifegeorgia. org.

For years, Georgians were required to visit a local driver services office to register as an organ and tissue donor. Registration is still available at the driver services offices but individuals can now also choose to register anywhere that has internet access. Registrations are secure and registered donors will have the opportunity to update their profile or remove themselves from the registry.

“We are thankful to the authors of the Georgia Revised Uniform Anatomical Gift Act for sponsoring the bill in 2008. It now allows individuals the opportunity to save lives through donation,” said Kathleen Lilly, Sr. Vice President/Executive Director, LifeLink of Georgia. “We also want to thank the Georgia Department of Driver Services for working with LifeLink of Georgia and the donor registry team to facilitate the completion of this important technology.”

Close to 3,000 Georgians are waiting for an organ transplant and hundreds more wait for corneal and tissue transplants which can help restore vision, treat burns and prevent amputations, etc.

To learn more about the Donate Life Georgia Organ Tissue Donor Registry visit http://www.donatelifegeorgia.org or contact Donate Life Georgia at 1-866-57-SHARE (74273).

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network. NEW for Ontario: recycleMe.org - Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today! For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register

In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ transplant.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Florida launches organ and tissue donor registry

Congratulations to Florida state officials for their initiative in establishing an on-line registry where Floridians can sign up to become organ, tissue and eye donors. Previously state residents indicated their preference to be an organ donor on their driver's license. Those who have become donors on their license are encouraged to sign-up and register on line as well.

Florida now joins a growing list of U.S. states that have on-line registries. For a list of Donor Designation (First Person Consent) Status by state please visit UNOS Newsroom fact sheets.

Also, please see Donate Life America's National Donor Designation Report Card

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network. NEW for Ontario: recycleMe.org - Learn The Ins & Outs Of Organ And Tissue Donation. Register Today! For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register

In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

She's been given the gift of life

The media has been very much on board by covering Organ and Tissue Donation Awareness events during the month of April. Newspapers, TV and radio are being saturated with coverage about the importance of organ donation and registering to be an organ donor. This event in Langley, British Columbia is just one of thousands of similar activities in communities all across North America. All of this publicity has got to have an impact...at least I hope so.

Heart recipient Langley resident Diane Baker spoke at the BC Transplant conference at the Langley Events Center on Monday.
Photo: John GORDON/Langley Times

By Monique Tamminga - Langley Times

Diane Baker is alive today because someone else’s heart is beating in her chest.

For nearly five years now, the single mother of two now-grown children has woken up every morning and thanked her donor and her donor’s family for giving her the gift of life.

She’s seen both her kids graduate from high school and, recently, from universities.

“There are no words to adequately describe how profoundly awesome the gift of life is,” Baker told a crowd at the launch of BC Transplant’s organ donor awareness week, held at the new Langley Events Center on Monday.

Numerous transplant recipients, and those still waiting for organs, attended the kick-off, including Langley Township councillor Charlie Fox, whose wife’s kidney was a match to give him a second chance at life. She was able to give her kidney to her husband and he’s already back working for the Township, less than two months later

Baker’s heart never worked properly. Until five years ago, she thought it was normal to hear your heart beating all the time.

One day, after Baker celebrated her 49th birthday, she fainted while reading in bed. Her daughter Laura came to say goodnight and as the two chatted for a couple minutes, Diane went faint.

The very proud single mother of two asked her son Evan to drive her to emergency.

Baker had always had heart problems, being sent for angiograms with a heart that beat erratically. This came despite living a healthy lifestyle, both trying to keep as active as her heart would let her and eating well.

When she went into ER, doctors gave her a pacemaker because her heart was only beating 30 times a minute. She was told to go home and be active. She tried and couldn’t.

Four months later she ended up in emergency again and was sent for a heart biopsy where she was finally given a proper diagnosis. Sadly, that diagnosis was fatal.

Cardiac sorcoidosis with congestive heart failure, was what she was told.

“Virtually overnight, it seemed I was dying,” she said.

“I could only walk about 10 feet before I had to stop to catch my breath.”

The rare disease attacks the heart muscle.

“Usually, a person should have a hole in their heart the size of the tip of a finger. Mine was the size of a mandarin orange,” she said.

At first, she was told she wasn’t a candidate for a new heart.

Doctors believed the sacroid would attack her heart. Through all of it she was determined to stay alive for her kids’ sake.

But something in Baker refused to even think of death.

On the morning the hospital called to say they had a heart ready for her she told them she didn’t think she could go because she didn’t have a ride.

“I packed my suitcase but couldn’t lift it,” she said.

“When the paramedics arrived, I came to the door and asked for a minute.

“I hugged my kids and said see you tomorrow. I sent them off to school,” she said.

“I just didn’t believe it was happening,” she said.

But it did happen and she’s walking, living proof.

There are currently 11 Langley residents waiting for a life-saving organ transplant, including youth activist Todd Hauptman who is waiting for a kidney.

Richard Brown was also in the audience, breathing easier thanks to a double lung transplant nearly two years ago.

In total, 69 Langley residents are alive today thanks to an organ transplant.

In Langley, volunteers will be in malls, and in other locations throughout City and Township “to encourage the people of Langley to register their decision (about organ donation),” says BC Transplant spokesperson Lisa Despins.

While many people in the province remember the former method of registering as a donor, a decal on a driver’s licence, that system has been gone since 1997, Despins said.

BC Transplant wanted the system to be open not just to motorists, but to everyone, and to make it easier for medical staff to get the information in a time of emergency.

Today’s online system allows anyone to register, and allows them to specify which organs they wish or donate, a distinction which was not available with the old driver’s licence decal system.

“People can see, in black and white, what your wish is,” said Despins.

Langley is a little above the average, with 17 per cent of the population registering, while in Kelowna 23 per cent of residents have registered.

There are some 300 British Columbians on the transplant list, as recipients.

In 2008, a record 266 transplants were performed in British Columbia, the third consecutive record-setting year.

Contributing to this success was a historical high in the number of organs available from people who have died, and a 42 per cent increase in the number of donors from the year previous.

More information, and online registration as a donor is available at BC Transplant, or call 1-800-663-6189.

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network
For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register

In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

How you can save a life - be an organ donor

This post lends further support to the use of on-line organ donor registration along with digital technology. As the article notes "part of the success of the organ transplant program in B.C. is probably due to a relatively new and innovative online legal organ donor consent system incorporating digital signature technology." Many other jurisdictions have already embraced this with great success and I hope many more will get on board soon.

The Record, New Westminster, B.C.

It seems like only last week that MLA Chuck Puchmayr was diagnosed with liver cancer and was waiting for a potential transplant.

In fact, it was only last week. Puchmayr is now getting to know his new, or rather used, new liver after receiving it on Saturday.
We wish him a full and quick recovery.

He will be one of the first in this rather fresh new year to receive a much-appreciated transplant organ.

Last year, a record 266 transplants were performed in British Columbia, the third consecutive record-setting year. A record 47 liver transplants were also performed.

Over the past four decades, more than 4,500 British Columbians have received a life-saving organ transplant.

Part of the success of the program is that there was a 42 per cent increase in the number of donors last year over 2007. This is great news. There are a lot of people whose lives depend on finding a kidney, lung or liver. And the need, of course, never goes away.

Part of the success of the organ transplant program in B.C. is probably due to a relatively new and innovative online legal organ donor consent system incorporating digital signature technology.

B.C. was the first in Canada to offer this. What it means is that British Columbians can register their decision on B.C.'s Organ Donor Registry using a customized donor registration form. It's a legal and paperless online alternative to mailing in forms.

However, as easy as it is, while 85 per cent of British Columbians surveyed said that they support organ donation and intend to register their decision, only about 16 per cent, at last count, have done so.

Come on, if you've made a resolution to help someone this year, this is the easiest and possibly most crucial decision you can make. You could save a life.
To register, visit http://www.transplant.bc.ca or telephone 1-800-663-6189.

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network
For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

In Great Britain, register at NHS Organ Donor Register

In Australia, register at Australian Organ Donor Register

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Monday, December 08, 2008

At times of grief, organ, tissue donors ease pain of others

By Melissa Heckscher, Staff Writer dailybreeze.com

For Yolanda Coffey, a successful day at work is as much about tragedy as it is triumph.

The 40-year-old El Segundo resident works as a family care coordinator for OneLegacy, a Los Angeles-based agency that finds organ and tissue donors for the nearly 100,000 men, women and children nationally who desperately need them to survive.

But for one life to be saved, another must be lost.

"A lot of people ask me, `Why would you do this job? You're talking to people who have just lost somebody they love; death is all you see,"' Coffey said. "But if they say yes to donation, we know that somebody else is going to have a chance to continue their life."

Since most organ and tissue donors are the victims of catastrophic accidents, organ donation isn't discussed as an option until all efforts to save the patient have been exhausted and he or she has been declared brain dead (the medical and legal definition of death).

It is then - while the body is still on life support to keep the heart pumping and the organs alive - that Coffey must approach the legal next of kin to ask them to consider donating their loved ones' organs.

"As hard as it is - at 3 o'clock in the morning, when I'm emotionally drained because we've been dealing with somebody that has died traumatically and dealing with grief - I leave there honored and just humbled by the experience," .

Often, Coffey said, she is faced with having to speak with family members who are registered as donors but who, for one reason or another, don't know the wishes of their hospitalized loved one.

"They are then faced with having to make that decision for them," she said.

It's a tragic trade-off, but a worthy one. According to organ donor groups, a single organ donor can save the lives of up to eight people, while a tissue donor may save or enhance the lives of more than 50 people.

Organs that can be donated include the kidneys, heart, lungs, liver, pancreas and intestines. Tissue donation can involve the corneas, middle ear, heart valves, bone, veins, cartilage, tendons and skin.

Organs or tissue that aren't used for transplants are used for research (unless the donor or family member has specified otherwise).

"We have been called in on patients who were on the transplant list themselves and they've had a stroke or had cardiac arrest," Coffey said. "We still have to approach their family members about donation, even though they, themselves, did not get an organ. Usually, the family will say, `You know what, because somebody didn't say yes, we have to say yes."'

Sometimes, the decision to donate stems from the desire to keep a loved one alive. Somehow.

That's how Faiez and Christina Ennabe of Diamond Bar saw it two years ago when their 19-year-old son, Andrew Ennabe, died after being struck by a car.

It was heartbreaking: Their son was dead, but his organs could be used to help people.

"We had never thought about it before," said Faiez Ennabe. "Initially, it was a selfish thing - I was not thinking about helping other people, I was just thinking, `If I can keep his heart beating, if I can keep his lungs breathing."'

He continued: "We decided that, yes, we want to donate as much as possible of Andrew to keep him going, to keep him alive" said Coffey, who worked as an EMT before starting at OneLegacy four years ago Mourning the loss of a loved one is hard enough. To then have to make the decision whether to donate his or her organs can be too much for some families to bear.

According to OneLegacy, 20 percent to 40 percent of those approached to donate a loved one's organs say no.

When 18-year-old Brandi Renee Guereca died of a rare brain aneurism in 2006, her mother, Denise Guereca, did not want to donate her youngest daughter's organs to anyone.

"My mom was like, `No, we're not donating, you're not going to open her up, you're not going to take her organs,"' said Brandi's sister, Briann Guereca, who is now 27. "I told her, `Brandi wanted this. We should honor her wishes."'

As it turned out, Brandi already had given legal consent to donate. Just months before her death, the young Montebello resident had become the first person to sign up online with the California Organ Donor Registry.

And, according to legislation enacted July 1, 2006, registering with the Donor Registry via its Web site http://www.donatelifecalifornia.org or through the California driver's license application, is considered legal consent.

Historically, signing a donor card and placing a pink dot on your license was considered only an "intent" to donate; familial consent was still required.

"My sister and I had already discussed that we would donate our organs," Briann Guereca said. "She was kind of cocky about it. She had said anybody who had her organs would be so lucky because they came from her."

And they were. Brandi's organs saved six people and helped more than 70 others.

"We heard from the man who has her liver - he had been born with a liver disease," her sister said. "We can't help but feel like we did something good, to save his family from the pain that we went through." Those who do say yes aren't quickly forgotten.

OneLegacy keeps in contact with the donor family for several years, offering support and keeping the family aware of how their loved one's donations were used. If both parties agree, OneLegacy will help arrange meetings between the donor family and the transplant recipients.

"It is still difficult for me to believe that there is something of Andrew living somewhere even though he's not here," Faiez Ennabe said. "But once you get that emotion out of the way it's an unbelievable feeling. I feel good because his death did not go to waste. He is still going strong and he's helping someone live a normal life."

According to OneLegacy, Andrew Ennabe's donation helped more than 50 people.

"I would love to meet every one of them, to see the difference he is making in their lives," said Ennabe, who has since started a charitable foundation in his son's name. "He did not die in vain."

According to the United Network for Organ Sharing, 18,659 organs have been transplanted in the U.S. from 9,490 donors so far this year.

It's not enough. There are about 100,000 people on the national organ transplant list - 20,000 of them in California - and a third of these people will die before getting the transplant they need, according to Donate Life California.

"There are people who are on the kidney list for 10 years," Coffey said. "We haven't been able to cure cancer, we haven't been able to cure diabetes, we don't have a cure for AIDS, but this is the one thing that people can actually say yes to and people could live."

THE FACTS

Myths about organ donation may be preventing people from becoming donors.

Here are the facts:

  • Myth: A person can be "too old" to donate.

  • Fact: Almost anyone can be a donor. The oldest organ donor was 92; the youngest, sadly, just 18 days.

  • Myth: Someone with diabetes or hepatitis cannot be a donor.

  • Fact: People with pre-existing health conditions, including hepatitis and diabetes, may still be able to donate. However, some conditions, such as HIV and actively spreading cancer, would disqualify a person as a potential donor.

  • Myth: "If I am a donor, doctors will not try as hard to save me."

  • Fact: It is only after every attempt has been made to save your life that donation will be considered. In fact, patients must receive the most aggressive life-saving care in order to be potential organ donors; if the heart stops, for instance, blood flow to the organs will stop and the organs will begin to deteriorate.

  • Myth: "Donating my organs will prevent me from having an open-casket funeral."

  • Fact: The organ donation operation is done under surgical, sterile conditions, in a hospital operating room, with all incisions made in locations that would be covered by clothing. Doctors go so far as to insert prosthetics into the body if bone is removed.

  • Myth: Only the major organs can be donated.

  • Fact: Though the major organs - including the heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, pancreas and small bowel - can save lives, the tissues (including skin, tendons, veins, muscle, cornea and bone) can be just as important. Skin, for instance, can be used to graft onto burn victims or to repair cleft palates.


  • THE NUMBERS

  • Every 12 minutes another name is added to the national organ transplant waiting list.

  • An average of 18 people die each day from the lack of available organs for transplant.

  • Approximately 1 million tissue transplants are performed annually. Source: Donate Life California/


FIND OUT MORE

To learn more about organ and tissue donation in California, or to register as a donor, go to http://www.donatelifecalifornia.org.

In the rest of the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network
For other Canadian provinces click here

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants. One tissue donor can help up to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Thursday, May 22, 2008

West Virginia Website Makes Organ Donation Easy

Congratulations to West Virginia for taking a leading role in enabling individuals to register as organ and tissue donors.

From HuntingtonNews.net:

Charleston, WV (HNN) -- The West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Motor Vehicles with the collaborative efforts of the Center for Organ Recovery & Education (CORE), Lifeline of Ohio and Kentucky Organ Donor Affiliates has developed a new online website that will enable individuals to sign up as organ donors rather than visiting a DMV office in person.

The website, DonateLife.wv.gov will allow visitors to add the donor designation by entering their driver’s license/photo ID number, date of birth and the last four digits of their social security number. The entire process takes an average of less than 90 seconds, and could save and enhance more than 50 lives.

“Studies have shown that most Americans believe in the power of saving lives through organ and tissue donation,” said DMV Commissioner Joseph Cicchirillo. “It was time to make the process of registering as a designated organ donor as simple as possible, so that more lives can be saved. Currently, only 37% of West Virginians who are registered drivers are designated as organ donors. We’d like to see an increase in the number of designations. The need is great in West Virginia and donors could be helping their neighbors.”

Currently, 200 West Virginians await a life-saving organ transplant, of the total 98,656 waiting nationwide. The number of organ donors has nearly doubled since 1994, however, there is still a need for donors. Everyday 18 to 20 people die waiting for a life-saving organ transplant.

CORE is a regional not-for-profit agency that is the primary call center and intermediary for the organ recovery and allocation process that serves 156 hospitals and more than six million people in western Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Chemung County, New York. CORE has helped to pioneer organ procurement allocation and recovery for this region since it was founded in 1977 as the Pittsburgh Transplant Foundation.

In connection, West Virginia Organ Donor vehicle license plates are available. For more information on the plate and CORE, visit the DMV website or call 304-558-3900.

“You Have the Power to Save Lives – Sign Your Donor Card & Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”

Register to be a donor in Ontario or Download Donor Cards from Trillium Gift of Life Network
For other Canadian provinces click here

In the United States, be sure to find out how to register in your state at ShareYourLife.org or Download Donor Cards from OrganDonor.Gov

Your generosity can save up to eight lives through organ donation and enhance another 50 through cornea and tissue donation