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Organ Donation

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Title: Organ Donation


1
Organ DonationThe Gift of Life
  • University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics
  • Organ Procurement Organization

2
Organ Procurement OrganizationsUniversity of
Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics OPO (Madison)
RedWisconsin Donor Network (Milwaukee)
GreenLifeSource (Minneapolis) - Blue
3
Recovery Agencies
  • Organ Recovery Agencies
  • UW Health OPO most of WI, UP of MI, Rockford,
    IL
  • Wisconsin Donor Network Milwaukee SE
    Wisconsin
  • LifeSource OPO Minnesota, N. S. Dakota, NW
    WI
  • Tissue Agencies Have contracts with individual
    hospitals
  • MTF
  • Wisconsin Tissue Bank
  • RTI Donor Services
  • ATSF
  • Lions Eye Bank of Wisconsin

4
National Transplant Waiting List
  • Type of Transplant Waiting Transplanted
    in 08 Kidney 79,252 16,514
  • Liver 15,845 6,318
  • Lung 1,954 1,478
  • Heart 2,782 2,163
  • Heart-lung 85
    27
  • Kidney-pancreas 2,269 836
  • Pancreas 1,535 437
  • Intestines 220 185
  • Totals 101,524 27,958
  • Source Organ Procurement and Transplant Network
    - As of 4/14/2009

5
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6
Wisconsin Transplant Waiting List
  • Type of Transplant Waiting Transplanted
    in 08
  • Kidney 1,071 445
  • Liver 218 155
  • Lung 66 40
  • Heart 82 29
  • Heart-lung 0 1
  • Kidney-pancreas 57 49
  • Pancreas 11 15
  • Intestines 2 0
  • Total 1,470 734
  • Source Organ Procurement and Transplant
    Network, As of 4/14/2009

7
Illinois Transplant Waiting List
  • Type of Transplant Waiting Transplanted
    in 08
  • Kidney 3,707 726
  • Liver 637 251
  • Lung 65 60
  • Heart 109 92
  • Heart-lung 4 0
  • Kidney-pancreas 155 41
  • Pancreas 83 34
  • Intestines 8 4
  • Total 4,618 1,208
  • Source Organ Procurement and Transplant
    Network, As of 4/13/2009

8
Michigan Transplant Waiting List
  • Type of Transplant Waiting Transplanted
    in 08
  • Kidney 2,502 578
  • Liver 307 209
  • Lung 45 43
  • Heart 84 52
  • Heart-lung 0 0
  • Kidney-pancreas 48 19
  • Pancreas 25 7
  • Intestines 0 0
  • Total 2.959 908
  • Source Organ Procurement and Transplant
    Network, As of 4/14/2009

9
ORGAN DONATION STATISTICS
  • There are more than 101,000 people currently
    waiting for an organ transplant in the United
    States, more than 2,500 are children.
  • The list is growing at the rate of one person
    every 13 minutes, or more than 3,000 patients
    each month.
  • Nearly 200 children and 6,300 adults died while
    waiting for an organ transplant last year.
  • 17 people die every day waiting for transplants.
  • More than 90 of Americans support organ
    donation, yet less than half say yes when
    approached at the time of donation.

10
Organs That Can Be Transplanted Conditions
Causing The Need For Transplant
  • Heart
  • Cardiomyopathy, Coronary Artery Disease,
    Congenital Heart Disease, Valvular Heart Diseases
  • Lungs
  • Emphysema/COPD, Cystic Fibrosis, Pulmonary
    Fibrosis, Primary Pulmonary Hypertension,
    Congenital Pulmonary Defects
  • Liver
  • Hepatitis A,B,C, Cirrhosis, Biliary Disease,
    Metabolic, Neoplasms
  • Pancreas
  • Diabetes Type I without Renal Disease,
    Hypoglycemic Unawareness, Pancreas after Kidney
    Transplant
  • Kidneys
  • End Stage Renal Disease, Diabetes with Renal
    Disease
  • Small Intestines
  • Short Gut Syndrome, Severe Vascular Disease

11
Tissue Eye Donation
  • Skin
  • Bone
  • Connective tissue (ligaments tendons)
  • Heart valves
  • Veins
  • Corneas

12
The Gift of Tissue Eye Donation
  • Skin is used for burn victims, and in
    reconstructive and cosmetic surgeries
  • Bone and connective tissue are often used for
    sports injuries or trauma repair
  • Veins are used for vascular surgeries
  • Corneas are used for certain types of blindness

13
The Differences.
  • Organ Donation
  • The patient must be maintained by a mechanical
    ventilator
  • Organs must be properly preserved and
    transplanted quickly
  • Life-saving procedure
  • Tissue/Eye Donation
  • Occurs in the first 24 hours after the heart has
    stopped beating
  • The tissues can be preserved and used at a later
    date
  • Life-enhancing procedure

14
Organ Preservation Time Limits
  • Heart 4 to 6 hours
  • Lungs 4 to 6 hours
  • Liver 12 hours
  • Pancreas 12 to 18 hours
  • Kidneys up to 72 hours
  • Small Intestines 4 to 6 hours

15
  • Current Criteria for Organ Donation
  • Patients who have been declared brain dead
  • OR
  • Patients with severe neurological injury and
    family and MD are discussing withdrawing
    ventilator support
  • Up to age 75 flexible there was a 96 y.o.
    donor last summer
  • HIV (at this time)
  • No active malignancy
  • Exception Primary CNS tumors
  • Note Only the OPO can determine
  • donor suitability

16
If I want to be a donor.
17
Say Yes to Donation
  • In Wisconsin you can legally consent to donation
    by signing the Anatomical Gift Statement on the
    back of your drivers license or state issued ID
    card.
  • You can indicate your support of donation by
    attaching an orange donor dot to the front of
    your license or ID card.
  • You can also include your donation decision in
    writing in your living will or healthcare POA
    documents.
  • BUT

18
The Most Important Step
  • Tell your family or legal next of kin your
    wishes. Hospital staff will ask them about your
    wishes as they relate to donation.

19
Who is my Legal Next of Kin ?
  • Healthcare Agent/POA
  • (if enabled to do so)
  • Spouse
  • Adult Child
  • Parent
  • Adult Sibling
  • Grandparent
  • Grandchildren
  • Legal Guardian
  • Coroner or ME

20
Can Your Family Go Against Your Wishes ?
  • If you havent legally documented your decision
    in writing, your legal next of kin has the right
    to make the decision, even if its not the
    decision that you wanted.
  • Its important to make sure that you have
    properly documented your decision and that they
    know your wishes about donation.

21
Through Organ Tissue Donation
  • One donor can
  • Save up to eight lives through organ donation
  • Give sight to up to two people
  • Enhance the lives of 40 or more people through
    tissue donation

22
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23
State Donation Data - DMV
  • Wisconsin Organ Tissue Donor Program
  • https//apps.dhfs.state.wi.us/OrganDonor/public
    /Home
  • Website query capabilities on organ donation
    according to
  • Age range, ethnicity, county, dates, etc.
  • Allows you to view/print intent map

24
Organ Donation Websites
  • United Network of Organ Sharing -
    UNOS www.unos.org
  • US Dept. Of Health and Human Services - HHS
    www.organdonor.gov
  • Donate Life America
  • www.shareyourlife.org or www.donatelife.net
  • Wisconsin Dept. of Health Services dhs.wisconsin.
    gov/health/donatelife/index.htm
  • University of Wisconsin OPO www.uwhcopo.org
  • Donate Life Wisconsin
  • www.donatelifewisconsin.org

25
Volunteer Opportunities
  • Sharing your personal story
  • Churches, civic groups, media, hospital
  • staff who work with donors/recipients, etc.
  • Staffing a booth on organ donation
  • Educating others Drivers ed classes, friends,
    community at large
  • Be a Dottie the Dot mascot/escort

26
Tips for Staffing a Booth
  • Display or Table Set Up
  • Keep it simple. Group materials neatly.
  • Stand or sit at different ends of the table.
  • Talking Points
  • Phrases to break the ice
  • Hello would you like a donor dot?
  • Hi have you made a decision about organ
  • donation?

27
Tips for Staffing a Booth
  • If they answer YES to either question
  • Offer a giveaway item (if available)
  • Ask if they have discussed their decision with
    their family.
  • If they answer NO
  • Offer the one-page info sheet
  • You can say This is a good reference with
    information and common questions about
    donation.

28
Tips for Staffing a Booth
  • If you are asked questions you dont know the
    answers
  • Be honest. Say you dont know but would be
    happy to have someone from the OPO follow up
    with them. Offer the websites on the one page
    info sheet.
  • If they would like OPO follow up
  • Forward their contact info question to Trey
    Schwab

29
Tips for Staffing a Booth
  • If someone is on the fence about donation
    you may say something like If you arent sure
    about donation, ask yourself this If you or one
    of your loved ones needed a transplant to live,
    would you accept it? If so, I would certainly
    hope that you would be willing to give that
    opportunity to another person.
  • Offer them a Got Your Dot flyer to take with
    them. Show them the web site on the back, where
    they can go to learn more.

30
Tips for Staffing a Booth
  • Please Remember.
  • A certain percentage of people will say No.
  • Organ donation is a very personal decision.
  • Our goal is to ask everyone to make an educated
    decision about donation and to share their
    decision with their family.
  • We arent trying to coerce people into being
    donors and we must respect personal decisions.
  • You are representing UW Health OPO.

31
Tips For Working With The Media
  • Per UW Policies UW Health Public Affairs
    needs to be notified of ANY media request for an
    interview or data.
  • Contact Kathy Schultz in Public Affairs
  • kschultz3_at_uwhealth.org
  • 608.262.9374 or 719-9086 or pager 4016

32
Tips For Working With The Media
  • Before the Interview
  • Kathy will follow-up with the reporter to get a
    feel for the type of story they are interested
    in. She will educate the reporter and/or share
    current data and facts, and will determine who to
    ask to do the interview.
  • She will then follow-up with the appropriate
    person and help them prepare for the interview.
  • Once she does that please respond to reporters
    quickly.
  • Ask Kathy or the reporter for a list of questions
    or topics.
  • Make sure you have consent before discussing any
    patient information.
  • CHECK WITH KATHY IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF ANYTHING !

33
Tips For Working With The Media
  • During an Interview
  • Message, Message, Message!
  • Speak clearly and use regular language (Avoid
    abbreviations and acronyms that are unfamiliar to
    people who havent experienced donation or
    transplantation.)
  • Dont lie or try to fudge the truth. If you dont
    know the answer, just say so. A good reporter
    will follow-up to find the answer elsewhere,
    and/or the question will not be included in the
    edited interview.
  • Stay on the record. There is no off the
    record with the media. If you say it, they can
    use it.
  • Use brief examples. Think quotable sound bite
    gt20 seconds.
  • Use good posture and retain eye contact with the
    reporter.
  • Mind your facial expressions and gestures. Body
    language speaks loudly.
  • Dress appropriately. Look professional, tidy and
    prepared. This raised the audiences perception
    that you are important and know what youre
    talking about.

34
Sensitive Terminology
Please Use
Harvest or harvesting of organs
Recover or recovery of organs
Instead of
Deceased donor orDeceased donation
Cadaver or Caderveric donor
Instead of
35
Common Questions in Regards to Donation
?
36
Will the doctors do everything they can to try
and save me if they know my wishes to be a donor?
  • Absolutely
  • The OPO team is separate from the medical team
    treating the patient. This ensures that there is
    no conflict of interest.
  • Donation is only considered after all efforts to
    save a patients life have been pursued by the
    medical team.

37
How does religion relate to organ donation?
  • The majority of religions support organ donation.
  • Most religions view organ and tissue donation as
    a charitable act.
  • Talk to your religious leader about donation.

38
Will donation disfigure the body?
  • No
  • Organs are removed through surgical incisions.
  • Areas affected by tissue donation are
    reconstructed and concealed by clothing.
  • A family is able to have an open casket funeral.

39
Does donation cost a family money?
  • No
  • Individual recovering agencies pay for all
    expenses associated with the recovery.
  • Those costs are passed on to the recipients and
    their insurance companies.
  • The donors family is responsible for the typical
    funeral expenses.

40
Will donation cause any delays with funeral
arrangements?
  • No
  • The recovering agency will make certain the body
    is released to the funeral home on time.
  • No extra planning is required by families of
    organ and tissue donors.

41
Can you pay to get an organ?
  • No
  • Allocation Criteria
  • Blood type
  • Medical urgency
  • Tissue match
  • Waiting time
  • Organ size
  • Immune status
  • Geographic distance

42
Will the organs be transplanted locally?
  • Yes, If.
  • There are local recipients for the organ.
  • There are no status-one patients in our region.
  • (livers only)
  • There are no recipients in the U.S. who are a
    perfect tissue-typing match.
  • (kidneys only)
  • Approximately 85-90 of all organs donated here
    are
  • used for transplants here.

43
Introducing Dottie the Dot!
  • Dottie is Wisconsins very own organ donation
    mascot.
  • She is designed to look like the orange donor
    dot (organ donation sticker) that Wisconsin
    residents place on their drivers license if they
    wish to be listed as a donor.
  • She was made possible by a generous donation from
    WPS Insurance. The Dottie program is managed by
    UW Health.

44
Dotties Mission
  • To increase the number of Wisconsin residents
    who declare their wish to be a donor.

45
Dotties Goals
  • Currently, 2.2 million (52 percent) of Wisconsin
    residents have already declared their intent to
    donate.
  • The Dottie program, along with several other
    state-wide initiatives, is working to raise that
    figure to over three million people, (75 percent)
    of Wisconsin residents.
  • That figure would put Wisconsin at the top of
    donation rates throughout the nation.

46
Understanding the Job and the Rules
47
Doing your job as a Dottie mascot and/or escort
  • You will appear at public and private events in
    communities throughout Wisconsin to promote
    organ, eye and tissue donation.
  • You will promote the Got your Dot? campaign
    encouraging residents to place an orange donor
    dot on their drivers license or state ID.
  • You will ask people if theyve Got their dot?
    and answer their questions about how to be listed
    as an organ, eye and tissue donor.
  • You will direct people to donatelifewisconsin.org
    to learn more and share their wishes.

48
Dotties escorts are
  • Champions for the cause.
  • Able to answer basic questions about organ
    donation.
  • Always directing people to the Donate Life
    Wisconsins Web site to learn more.
  • Responsible for ensuring Dotties safety and
    comfort level at all times.
  • Clean, neat, respectful and appropriate.

49
How Do I Become a Mascot/Escort?
  • Email dottiedot_at_uwhealth.org or complete a
    volunteer form today.
  • Anyone can be a Dottie escort, however mascots
    must meet specific height, size and physical
    requirements towear the costume.
  • Join the team of more than 75 people who are
    volunteering their time and energy to the Dottie
    the Dot program.
  • Dottie will be a big part of the Transplant Games
    in 2010, so dont miss your chance to join the
    fun!

50
An Overview Madison 2010
51
What are the U.S. Transplant Games?
  • Olympic-style competition that is held every two
    years.
  • Competitors have all received organ transplants.
  • 12 sports with 41 different events.
  • Ages - 18 months to 80 years.
  • Programs, ceremonies and workshops.
  • Organized by the National Kidney Foundation and
    the Wisconsin Local Organizing Committee

52
Competitions
  • Badminton
  • Basketball
  • Bowling
  • Cycling
  • Golf
  • Racquetball
  • Road Race
  • Swimming
  • Table Tennis
  • Tennis
  • Track Field
  • Volleyball

53
Additional Activities
  • Games Expo/Athlete Village
  • Opening Closing Ceremonies
  • Kids Time Activities
  • 5K Public Road Race
  • Nightly Social Lounge
  • Donor/Recipient Golf Outing
  • Professional Conference
  • Giving, Grieving, Growing Workshop for Donor
    Families
  • Donor Recognition Ceremony
  • Living Donor Recognition Event
  • Workshops for Living Donors
  • Donor Quilt Pinning Ceremony
  • Coffee House
  • Family Fun Night

54
Program Objectives
  • Demonstrate success of transplantation.
  • Call public attention to need for more donors.
  • Rehabilitation of transplant recipients.
  • Honor both living and non-living donors.
  • Involve the transplant community and the local
    community as a whole.

55
Who Attends?
  • Transplant recipients
  • Donor families
  • Living donors
  • Transplant professionals
  • Family and friends
  • Local community

56
Games Growth
57
Games Locations
  • 1990 IUPUI (Indianapolis, IN)
  • 1992 UCLA (Los Angeles, CA)
  • 1994 Emory (Atlanta, GA)
  • 1996 U of Utah (Salt Lake City, UT)
  • 1998 Ohio State (Columbus, OH)
  • 2000/2 Disney World (Orlando, FL)
  • 2004 U of Minn. (Minneapolis, MN)
  • 2006 Conv. Ctr./U of L (Louisville, KY)
  • 2008 UPMC/Pittsburgh, PA
  • 2010 Madison, WI (Statewide LOC)

58
Coming Soon
  • Complete information will be released to the
    public and the media. This communication will
    include the following areas
  • Volunteering Opportunities and How to sign-up.
  • Participation information for transplant
    recipients who want to compete for Team
    Wisconsin.
  • Participation information for donor families
    and/or living donors who wish to attend and take
    part in the 2010 Games.
  • Information for companies and corporations that
    would like to get involved.
  • A list of contacts for people who are looking for
    more information, someone to speak to their
    group, etc.

59
How Can You Help?
  • Let your employer, community groups, etc. know
    that the Transplant Games are coming and see if
    they would like to get involved.
  • We will need donations both cash and in-kind
    (printing services, professional assistance,
    etc.)
  • Spread the word to your friends and families.
  • Identify any contacts that you have that would be
    of assistance to Trey Schwab.
  • VOLUNTEER we will need approximately 3,000
    volunteer days to make the Games a success.

60
To Get Involved
  • Contact Trey Schwab at the UW Health OPO - (608)
    890-9451 or via e-mail at rschwab_at_uwhealth.org

61
http//www.dot.wisconsin.gov/drivers/vehicles/p
ersonal/special/donatelife.htm Proceeds go to
Donate Life WI to help support a WI State Donor
Registry
62
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