Organ, Eye and Tissue Donation

Choosing to be an organ, eye and tissue donor is a powerful decision. 

You can give the gift of life to others by registering to be a donor today.
Learn more about the organ donation process below.

How Does Organ, Eye and Tissue Donation Work?

Traumatic Injuries & End of Life Care

Unfortunately, traumatic injuries happen. When they do, emergency medical personnel on the scene and doctors in the hospital will make every effort to restore life to the patient, regardless of one’s organ donor designation status.

Hospitals are solely responsible for declaring death. Infinite Legacy is not involved in patient care and only has authority to proceed with organ recovery after an independent hospital doctor has declared death. If a patient is declared dead by a doctor(s) in a Maryland, Northern Virginia or Washington, DC hospital, the hospital will refer the patient case to Infinite Legacy, this region’s organ procurement organization (OPO).

Only once death is declared by the hospital doctor(s), a specially trained organ recovery specialist from Infinite Legacy will go to the hospital and evaluate if the patient is medically suitable to be an organ donor.

Infinite Legacy will check local, state and national registries to see if the patient is a registered organ donor. If so, we will inform the family that their loved one was registered to give the gift of life to others in need of an organ, eye or tissue transplant. Infinite Legacy has a legal obligation to honor all end-of-life decisions, including donor designation. The states of Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia recognize that registering to be an organ donor is a legally binding decision that Infinite Legacy and hospitals are required to honor after death.

If a patient is not registered to be an organ donor, but is determined medically suitable to be one, a specially trained family services coordinator from Infinite Legacy will discuss organ, eye and tissue donation options with the patient’s family. The family can ask questions and reflect before deciding on behalf of their loved one.

If authorization is granted either through first-person authorization or family authorization, the patients’ viable organs and tissues will be recovered by surgical teams. Next, an organ candidate will be selected by a computer matching system based on factors such as blood and tissue type, organ/tissue size, how sick the patient is, time spent waiting and geographic proximity to the donor hospital.

The decision to be an organ, eye and donor does not affect having an open casket nor does it delay any funeral services.

Graphics include a heart, a set of lungs, a liver, kidneys, a pancreas, and an intestine.

What Organs Can be Donated?

  • Kidneys

  • Heart

  • Lung

  • Liver

  • Pancreas

  • Intestines

What Tissues Can be Donated?

  • Corneas

  • Skin

  • Heart Valves

  • Pericardium

  • M/S Grafts (Bone and Connective Tissue)

  • Arteries/Veins

FACT:

One organ donor can save up to 8 lives and save and heal more than 75 lives through tissue donation.

FACT:

A kidney is the most needed organ transplant in Maryland, Northern Virginia and Washington, DC.

FACT:

13 people die each day while waiting for an organ transplant.

FACT:

There are more than 100,000 people waiting for a lifesaving organ transplant in the United States.

FACT:

Almost 4,000 people are waiting for an organ transplant in Maryland, Northern Virginia and Washington, DC.

Joe DiMeo, a vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA) face and double hand transplant recipient wraps his arm around his wife, smiling.

What is VCA Donation?

Vascular Composite Allograft (VCA) is a form of organ donation that includes donating organs like hands, feet, uteri and more. VCA recipients have often experienced a traumatic event or accident that significantly changed their lifestyle and physical appearance. VCA donation has the power to increase a recipient’s quality of life and movement. It can even provide psychological and physical healing.

How is Tissue Donation Different from Organ Donation?

While less than one percent of deaths meet the criteria for organ donation, a majority of people are eligible to be tissue donors. Hospitals are required to report all deaths to their designated organ procurement organization (OPO).

If the tissue donor meets donor eligibility, the registry is checked. Once authorization is verified or consent is given by the potential donor’s family, a medical team is dispatched by the OPO. Each tissue donor can save and enhance more than 75 lives.

Research, Therapy & Non-Traditional Transplant

At Infinite Legacy, we realize the power of new and innovative ways in which donors and their families can save and enhance lives beyond traditional organ and tissue donation and transplantation. Through our research programs, donors are able to donate organs, tissue systems and individual tissues unsuitable for transplants to far-reaching medical research and therapy. We have 20 direct research partners ranging from NIH to Johns Hopkins University who strive to save lives through scientific studies.

Register to be an Organ Donor with Infinite Legacy

Register to be an organ donor today with Infinite Legacy. You have the power to give the gift of life and save others. If you have any questions regarding your current registration or registering to be an organ donor, please feel free to contact us.
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