KentuckyOne Health Encourages Kentuckians to Donate Life - Archived
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Barbara Mackovic, Senior Manager, Media Relations
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KentuckyOne Health Encourages Kentuckians to Donate Life
Organ and tissue donation can save the lives of more than 123,000 waiting nationwide
Louisville, Ky. (April 5, 2016) – April is National Donate Life Month and KentuckyOne Health is encouraging Kentuckians to give the gift of life and register to be an organ and tissue donor. According to Donate Life, there are more than 123,000 men, women and children waiting for an organ or tissue transplant right now. Every 10 minutes, another name is added to that list. More than 6,500 people a year – about 22 a day – die before that organ ever becomes available. Becoming an organ and tissue donor can help save these lives.
“Organ and tissue donation is a generous and worthwhile decision that gives a second chance at life to not just one, but up to 50 people in need,” said Christopher Jones, MD, director of abdominal transplant, Jewish Hospital Trager Transplant Center and University of Louisville Physicians.
“Across the nation, there are thousands of people waiting for ‘the call’ that a match has been found because organ donors are in short supply. You could be that phone call to save a life.”
According to a recent study by Kentucky Organ Donor Associates (KODA), 90 percent of people say that they support organ donation, but only 30 percent understand the different types of organ donation and how to register. There are multiple ways to become an organ donor. In Kentucky you can register online at www.donatelifeky.org or when you renew your driver’s license. In Indiana, you can register online at www.indianadonornetwork.org or at the Bureau of Motor Vehicles (BMV).
Organs that can be donated for transplantation include kidneys, heart, lungs, liver and pancreas. Tissues that can be donated include eyes, skin, heart valves, bones, saphenous veins and tendons. Donations help patients with life-threatening illnesses and injuries.
Donors are needed for all races and ethnic groups. Minority donors are especially important because transplants are more successful when donor and recipient are of the same ethnic background. However, organs can sometimes be transplanted between sexes and races, depending on factors such as blood type and body size.
Organ and tissue donation legislation in Kentucky and Indiana ensures that your wishes to donate life will be carried out after death if you register through the organ and tissue donation registry, sign the back of your driver’s license, or specify on personal legal documents. It is also important to inform your family of your wishes. If you decide to become an organ and tissue donor, and then change your mind while you are still living, you may remove your name from the list.
Living organ donation is also an option that allows volunteers to donate select non-critical organs and tissues, such as a kidney or skin, to someone in need while they are still living. Living donations usually occur between family members or close friends, but can come from anonymous donors.
Jewish Hospital, part of KentuckyOne Health, is a national leader in living organ transplants. Transplant teams work to provide minimally invasive surgical techniques, which result in shorter hospital stays and a quicker recovery time for living donors. The transplant teams include surgeons, nephrologists, hepatologists, psychologists, transplant coordinators, social workers, dieticians, pharmacists and an independent donor advocate, who work together to ensure patients have the best medical care.
The hospital is home to the Living Kidney Donor Transplant Program. Living kidney donation takes place when a living person donates one of their kidneys to someone in need of a transplant. This donor can be a friend, relative or an anonymous donor. For more information on living organ donation, call the Living Donor Transplant Coordinator at 502.587.4358.
The James Graham Brown Cancer Center, a partnership of KentuckyOne Health and the University of Louisville, is one of just two facilities in Kentucky — the only one in the Louisville area — to offer a Bone Marrow Transplantation Program (BMT). Bone marrow transplants have transformed leukemia and related cancers, once thought incurable, into highly treatable diseases. This procedure replaces damaged or destroyed bone marrow with healthy bone marrow stem cells. For more information, visit www.kentuckyonehealth.org/bmt-online-resources.
For more information about organ and tissue donation in Kentucky, please visit www.kyorgandonor.org. For more information about donation in Indiana, visit www.indianadonornetwork.org. For more information about organ donation and transplant care within KentuckyOne Health, please visit www.kentuckyonehealth.org/transplantcare.
About KentuckyOne Health
KentuckyOne Health was formed when two major Kentucky health care organizations came together in early 2012. KentuckyOne Health combines the Jewish and Catholic heritages of the two former systems – Jewish Hospital & St. Mary’s HealthCare and Saint Joseph Health System. In late 2012, the organization formed a partnership with the University of Louisville Hospital | James Graham Brown Cancer Center. The nonprofit system is committed to improving the health of Kentuckians by integrating medical research, education, technology and health care services wherever patients receive care. KentuckyOne Health has more than 200 locations including hospitals, physician groups, clinics, primary care centers, specialty institutes and home health agencies across the state of Kentucky and southern Indiana. KentuckyOne Health is the largest health system in Kentucky.
Publish date:
Tuesday, April 05, 2016