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  2. In Texas, can someone change the donor status on your ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/texas-someone-change-donor-status...

    Now I have to unregister as a donor. I’m a cancer patient and have never been a donor.” Donate Life Texas is the official organ, eye and tissue donor registry for the state of Texas. Chad ...

  3. Organ donation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_donation

    The National Donor Monument, Naarden, the Netherlands Organ donation is the process when a person authorizes an organ of their own to be removed and transplanted to another person, legally , either by consent while the donor is alive, through a legal authorization for deceased donation made prior to death, or for deceased donations through the authorization by the legal next of kin.

  4. Organ procurement organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_procurement_organization

    Once the OPO receives authorization for donation from the decedent's family or through first-person authorization (such as a state or national Donor Registry), it works with UNOS to identify the best candidates for the available organs, and coordinates with the surgical team for each organ recipient.

  5. Organ procurement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_procurement

    If the organ donor is human, most countries require that the donor be legally dead for consideration of organ transplantation (e.g. cardiac death or brain death). For some organs, a living donor can be the source of the organ. For example, living donors can donate one kidney or part of their liver to a well-matched recipient. [2]

  6. How a father gave his kidney to a stranger to save his wife ...

    www.aol.com/father-gave-kidney-stranger-save...

    Nearly one in three (27 per cent) kidney transplants are from a living donor, benefiting about 900 patients in the UK each year. In 2023-24, 185 of those transplants were performed through the ...

  7. Organ transplantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_transplantation

    In living donors, the donor remains alive and donates a renewable tissue, cell, or fluid (e.g., blood, skin), or donates an organ or part of an organ in which the remaining organ can regenerate or take on the workload of the rest of the organ (primarily single kidney donation, partial donation of liver, lung lobe, small bowel).

  8. Mandated choice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandated_choice

    A 1992 survey found that 90% of American college students favored a mandated choice model for organ donation, compared with only 60% who favored presumed consent. [7] However, Texas implemented such a program, requiring drivers to make a choice on organ donation when obtaining licenses, and found that 80% of drivers declined to donate.

  9. Organ theft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_theft

    Organ theft is the act of taking a person's organs for transplantation or sale on the black market, without their explicit consent through means of being an organ donor or other forms of consent. Most cases of organ theft involve coercion, occurrences in wartime, or thefts within hospital settings. [ 1 ]