When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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.

  3. Uniform Anatomical Gift Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Anatomical_Gift_Act

    [6] [3] The only exception allowing an individual's consent to donate to be overridden is in the case of the death of a minor when parents or guardians may override the minor's consent. [ 6 ] [ 3 ] Language in the Act is also made more clear so that one cannot revoke an anatomical gift as the donor's decision is final.

  4. Organ donation after medical assistance in dying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_donation_after...

    Organs regularly transplanted include lungs, heart, cornea, pancreas, and kidneys. Modes of donation are an altruistic living donation of a non-vital organ (generally a kidney) and post-mortal organ donation (PMOD). PMOD can be subdivided into donation after brain death (DBD) and donation after circulatory determination of death (DCDD). [5]

  5. More than 20,000 people are waiting on California’s organ transplant list for tissue, eye or organ donations, according to Sierra Donor Services, and roughly 78% of them come from communities of ...

  6. Organ procurement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_procurement

    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] Organs cannot be procured after the heart has stopped beating for a long time. Thus, donation after brain death is generally preferred because the organs are still receiving ...

  7. Organ donation in the United States prison population

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_donation_in_the...

    Prisons typically do not allow inmates to donate organs as living donors to anyone but immediate family members. There is no law against prisoner organ donation; however, the transplant community has discouraged use of prisoner's organs since the early 1990s due to concern over prisons' high-risk environment for infectious diseases. [1]

  8. List of organ transplant donors and recipients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_organ_transplant...

    N/A; organs donated upon death [100] Oscar Robertson (1938–) Basketball Hall of Famer. Donated kidney to his daughter Tia. Kidney 1997 [101] Neda Soltan (1983–2009) Iranian martyr, a bystander at a political protest, her death was recorded by cell phone cameras. Various Circa June 20, 2009 N/A; organs donated upon death [102] Angélico Vieira

  9. Israeli–Arab organ donations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli–Arab_organ_donations

    After his death his parents donated four of his organs to four Jewish and two Arab citizens of Israel. Khatib's heart was transplanted into a 12-year-old Druze girl. A Jewish teenager received his lungs. Khatib's liver was divided between a seven-month-old Jewish girl, who did not survive the surgery, [17] and a 58-year-old Jewish woman.