YOU HAVE THE POWER TO SAVE LIVES. PLEDGE AND REGISTER TODAY

Follow us to learn more about organ donation and our national efforts to raise awareness about the critical need for donated organs. We are finding inspiration in unexpected places.

BECAUSE ORGAN & TISSUE DONATION MATTERS

There are over 113,000 Americans waiting for a life-saving transplant. Registering takes only a few minutes. Please encourage your family, friends and colleagues to pledge the "gift of life" by signing up at your State's donor registry. Click HERE to learn how. Californians, please visit Donate Life California.

Our Pledge Life Memorial, "Celebrate Life...Remembrance". We are pledging to HONOR, remember and celebrate the lives of donors, transplant recipients, donation and transplant community members. Will you PLEDGE with us to do the same?
DL Life Logo April 27,2012 - - - - 113,953 AMERICANS ARE CANDIDATES ON THE UNOS TRANSPLANT WAIT LIST DL Life Logo 91,996 waiting for a kidney DL Life Logo 16,098 waiting for a liver DL Life Logo 1,269 waiting for a pancreasDL Life Logo 2,153 waiting for a Kidney-PancreasDL Life Logo 3,172 waiting for a heartDL Life Logo 1,632 waiting for a lungDL Life Logo 52 waiting for a heart-lungDL Life Logo 278 waiting for small bowelDL Life Logo One organ donor has the opportunity to save up to 8 lives DL Life Logo One tissue donor has the opportunity to save and -or enhance the lives of 50 or more individuals DL Life Logo You have the power to SAVE Lives by becoming an organ, eye and tissue donor, so what are you waiting for? To learn how to register click HEREDL Life Logo

Thursday, July 8, 2010

INTERNATIONAL ORGAN DONATION AWARENESS-SOUTH AFRICA

Source: The Southern Cross - South Africa's National Catholic Weekly
Letters Editor

Many reasons to donate organs


From Dickon Daggit, Cape Town:
I  would like to compliment  and thank you for your editorial on organ transplants (June 16). I received a new kidney on New Year’s Eve, and it is really as if my life has started anew.
I had been waiting for a transplant for three years and was on dialysis for two. The depression of dialysis is indescribable: I was one of the lucky ones to have to be dialysed only twice a week. I had to leave for the unit at 15:45 to be put onto the machine anywhere between 16:30 and 17:00.
The dialysis itself lasted four hours with 30 minutes at each end for getting you on, and waiting for the bleeding to stop when getting off. It was six hours door to door, feeling awful afterwards, up to half of the next day. Then a good day, and then back to the unrelenting grind.
As I have no relatives and a rare blood type there was no possibility of a live donor. Although some friends offered, they were turned down for one reason or another. The kidney eventually came from a 16-year-old male who had been killed in circumstances unknown to me.
Although the euphoria of the kidney kicking in immediately was indescribable, psychologically it was difficult coming to terms with the idea that someone had died, and by so doing had let me live.
The view expressed by a good many of my visitors was: “Well, there’s no point in me becoming an organ donor, as nobody would want my parts.” That made me angry: everyone is entitled to say they don’t want to donate, but to say that your organs are useless to another is a cop out.
How can anyone say that their 50-year-old corneas are not needed by a 60-year-old with failing eyesight, or that their 40-year-old kidneys cannot save the life of another 40-year-old? Leave it to the experts: the transplant organisations are way better qualified to determine whether organs are of use.
Unless you have an ethical reason for not becoming an organ donor, please contact the Organ Donor Foundation — you could save a life or even more.

0 COMMENTS: