Donate Life Month 2014 Talking Points April is National Donate Life Month, a time to honor donors and donor families who have made life-saving gifts to patients in need. It is also a time to raise awareness for the ongoing need for organ, tissue and eye donation. Transplants offer patients a new chance at happy, productive and normal lives and return them to their families, friends and communities. As home to the Wisconsin Donor Network and Wisconsin Tissue Bank, BloodCenter of Wisconsin encourages people to become an organ, tissue and eye donor with a donor dot and signature on their driver’s license, and by joining the online registry. BloodCenter works in collaboration with its partners in the community, such as hospitals, drive sponsors and government officials, to promote the importance of donation. For more information and to join a registry, visit www.bcw.edu/sharinglife. Individuals are also encouraged to share their wishes with their family members. Organ Donation Facts Nationally, more than 121,000 people are waiting for transplants; 2,450 of them are in Wisconsin. Eighteen people die every day waiting for a transplant. Every 11 minutes someone is added to the list. In 2013, the Wisconsin Donor Network helped to facilitate 183 life-saving organ transplants. Heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestines can be transplanted. People of all ages and medical histories should consider themselves potential donors. Your medical condition at the time of death will determine what organs and tissue can be donated. Organ Donation FAQs What does it mean to register? Having your name included in the Wisconsin donor registry means that you have authorized the gift of your organs, tissues and eyes upon your death. Registering indicates legal consent for donation. Your gift will be used to save and improve the lives of others. Does my religion support donation? Every major religion in the United States supports organ, tissue and eye donation as one of the highest expressions of compassion and generosity. Is there a cost to be an organ, eye and tissue donor? There is no cost to the donor’s family or estate for donation. The donor family pays only for medical expenses before death and costs associated with funeral expenses. Does my social and/or financial status play any part in whether or not I will receive a transplant if I ever need one? No. When you are on the transplant waiting list for an organ donor, what really counts is the severity of your illness, body size, tissue type, blood type and other important medical information. -MORE- Tissue/Eye Donation Facts More than one million Americans receive tissue transplants of bone, heart valves, tendons, ligaments, corneas and skin annually. One in 20 people will need a tissue transplant in their lifetime. One tissue donor can improve the lives of more than 50 people. BloodCenter of Wisconsin’s Wisconsin Tissue Bank serves 73 hospitals throughout the state. In 2013, BloodCenter supported 461 families who gave the gift of tissue donation. More than 25,000 patients received tissue in 2013 through BloodCenter of Wisconsin as a result of donor gifts. Each year, more than 45,000 corneal transplants are needed to improve lives across the U.S. Marrow Donation Facts Every year, more than 35,000 children and adults in the United States are diagnosed with lifethreatening diseases, such as leukemia or lymphoma. For many of them, receiving healthy marrow and/or blood stem cell transplants is their only chance for survival. These patients depend on Be The Match Marrow Registry for a life-saving marrow match. By joining the Be The Match Marrow Registry you could be the life-saving match for someone waiting for a transplant. Visit www.bcw.edu/sharinglife to register. Joining Be The Match Registry is simple. Basic requirements for registering to be a potential donor include being between the ages of 18 and 44, in general good health and willing to be available if identified as a match for a patient in need. Once a health history form is completed, a mouth swab test is given. The swabs are tested to determine tissue type and individuals are only contacted if identified as a match. The process, including paperwork, takes approximately 15 minutes. Blood Donation Facts Every three seconds someone needs blood. Every day hundreds of local patients rely on the generosity of blood donors. Donating blood is quick, safe and relatively painless. Generally, you can donate blood if you are at least 16 years old (with a parent’s consent), weigh 110 pounds and are free of cold, flu or allergy symptoms. Blood is needed by a variety of patients including those with cancer, premature babies, accident victims and those undergoing surgery. For more information on donation, visit www.bcw.edu/sharinglife