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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

Friday, April 8, 2011

Arizona restores organ transplant funding
(Reuters) - Arizona has restored funding for some organ transplants that the state cut last year in a controversial move to help close a yawning budget deficit.


Under a new budget signed by Arizona Republican Governor Jan Brewer late on Wednesday, the state will again provide coverage for pancreas, liver, heart and lung transplants for Medicaid patients in the state aged 21 and older.

The state's move last October to deny transplant funding to about 98 Medicaid patients angered critics who said Arizona should not be targeting potentially life-saving procedures in its efforts to cut costs.

"This is death for me," one patient awaiting a heart transplant, told Reuters last month.

At least two transplant patients died following the cuts, although it was not clear if a transplant would have saved them.

Last year's measure was designed to reduce spending on Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program for the poor and disabled, to help close a projected 2012 state budget deficit of $1.15 billion.

Brewer had singled out the Medicaid program as the greatest drain on state coffers.

State officials said on Thursday that the new budget restored the funding retroactive to April 1.

"As part of the broader budget solution reached between the governor and the Legislature, that funding was restored and we have begun covering the transplants again," Monica Coury, an official at the state Medicaid program, the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, told Reuters on Thursday.

Steven Daglas, an advocate working with the families of the patients who had been denied coverage, welcomed the move.

"The families and the individuals who have worked so hard and lived through this nightmare for the past few months, have cause for joy tonight ... they have their chance at life back," Daglas said.
(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Jerry Norton and Peter Cooney)

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