When.com Web Search

Search results

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

  3. Uniform Anatomical Gift Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Anatomical_Gift_Act

    [2] [3] The UAGA was drafted in order to increase organ and blood supplies and donation and to protect patients in the United States. [9] It replaced numerous state laws concerning transplantation and laws lacking a uniform procedure of organ donation and an inadequate process of becoming a donor. [9] All states adopted the original version of ...

  4. 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.

  5. Organ donation in the United States prison population

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

    Organ donation has the potential to greatly improve quality of life as well as prevent death in patients with end-stage organ failure. There is an endemic shortage of organ donors within the United States, resulting in an immediate and persistent need for additional, suitable organ donors. Death row inmates are a possible source of additional ...

  6. Vial of Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vial_of_Life

    The Vial of Life (French: Fiole de vie), [1] [2] also known as Vial of L.I.F.E. (Lifesaving Information for Emergencies), is a program that allows individuals to have their complete medical information readily available in their homes for emergency personnel to reference during an emergency. The program provides the patient's medical ...

  7. Organ gifting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_Gifting

    It motivated the Nixon administration in the U.S. to reform its system of blood donation and led many people in the U.K. to oppose models of marketable blood donation systems. [9] This concept has been incorporated into the phrase "the gift of life" which was used to refer to multiple forms of organ, blood, tissue, semen, and cell line donations.

  8. California End of Life Option Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_End_of_Life...

    End of Life Option Act added to Division 1 of the California Health and Safety Code. [9] The act includes definitions and procedures which must be fulfilled, a statement of request for aid-in-dying drugs which must be signed and witnessed and a final attestation of intent signed 48 hours before self-administering the drug. [9]

  9. Foundation (United States law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundation_(United_States_law)

    A foundation in the United States is a type of charitable organization. Though, the Internal Revenue Code distinguishes between private foundations (usually funded by an individual, family, or corporation) and public charities (community foundations and other nonprofit groups that raise money from the general public).