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

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

State Fair Disaster Brings Organ Donations to Light

By Alex Brown (alex@wibc.com)

Discussions of organ donation and end-of-life planning are coming up again as a result of the Indiana State Fair disaster.

24-year-old Megan Toothman died Monday afternoon but not before doctors kept her on life support in order to harvest her organs for donation. She is the seventh person to die following the stage collapse at the State Fair. Sam Davis, Director of the Indiana Organ Procurement Organization, says end-of-life conversations aren't popular among Americans.

 Listen to the Interview:
 


"What goes on or what you would like to have happen at the end of your life is just not something that people generally want to talk about and so often they will make a decision and put it in writing but won't necessarily make a lot of mention about it," Davis says.

Davis says from his conversations with families, talking about end-of-life procedures makes it easier for the family because it's one less thing for the family to think or worry about. Davis says having the organ donation heart on your driver's license makes it even easier for families.

Davis says the priority in these cases is to make sure that every attempt to save a life has been made.
"For those of us who work in this particular field of health care, we would not want it any other way because frankly, it might be one of us there someday or one of our family members and we would want the appropriate thing done."

0 COMMENTS: