December 29, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 29, 2025

Denver, CO — Dec. 31, 2025 — Donor Alliance, the federally designated organ procurement organization serving Colorado and Wyoming, today announced that Bradley T. Kornfeld will retire from his service on the organization’s Governing Board of Directors effective Dec. 31 2025. Kornfeld has served the organization since 2004 and is a dedicated advocate for the lifesaving mission of organ, eye and tissue donation. He will leave behind a legacy of exceptional leadership, including multiple terms as Board Chair. In recognition of his extraordinary contributions, Kornfeld has been named Board Member Emeritus, ensuring his continued connection to the organization and its mission.

Kornfeld’s journey with organ transplantation began through deeply personal experiences, which transformed his outlook and inspired his commitment to advocacy. In 1993, his father became one of the world’s first successful double-lung transplant recipients, and in 2004, Kornfeld made the life-changing decision to donate his own kidney to his father. Leveraging his unique dual perspective as both a living donor and the son of a recipient, he has dedicated much of his life to educating the public on the profoundly positive impact of donation and transplantation.

During his tenure on Donor Alliance’s Governing Board, Kornfeld served on multiple committees and played an integral role in selecting the organization’s current executive leadership team. His contributions to the donation and transplantation community extend beyond the boardroom. Kornfeld was actively involved in the passage of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act in Colorado, helping to strengthen the state’s legal framework for organ donation. At the national level, he served on the Board of Directors of the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN), bringing an invaluable firsthand perspective to national policy discussions as one of the few living donors on the board.

“Brad has been a cornerstone of our organization for over two decades and has played an integral part in shaping the leadership and future of both Donor Alliance and the entire donation and transplantation community,” said Jennifer Prinz, president and CEO of Donor Alliance. “His journey as a living donor and his tireless advocacy truly embody the spirit of compassion and resilience. We are deeply grateful for his dedication to saving and healing lives in our community and across the country.”

This holiday season, Donor Alliance connected with communities throughout Colorado and Wyoming to share the life-saving message of organ, eye, and tissue donation. From twinkling tree lightings to festive parades, we reminded the community that the greatest gift we can give is the gift of life.

A season of connection and community

Holiday season at Aurora tree lightningThis December, our team and dedicated advocates participated in wonderful community events throughout Colorado and Wyoming, including the Cheyenne Christmas Parade, the Aurora Tree Lighting, a virtual presentation with Amigos de Mexico, and the spectacular 9News Parade of Lights in Denver. Each event gave us the opportunity to connect with families, share stories of hope, and spread awareness about the life-saving power of organ donation. Our incredible volunteer advocates, the heart and soul of our mission, braved the cold weather, engaged with parade-goers, and shared their personal stories with compassion and courage. Their commitment is what makes our message reach further and save more lives.

Meet Elita and Bryan Hester

Experiencing the gift of life firsthand, the entire family became registered donors. Bryan, Elita’s husband, is a cornea recipient who now sees the world clearly thanks to an extraordinary gift. In what they call the “miracle of Hester Street,” Bryan discovered that he had officiated the funeral of the very friend whose cornea he received, a connection he describes as his donor “getting to see his own funeral through the eyes he gave.” Most recently, the family was touched again by donation when Elita’s mother became an organ donor after her passing, giving hope and life to others. Elita shared that her mother’s gift brought comfort and healing during her grief journey. They’re using their story to help raise awareness and hopefully spread more hope throughout Colorado. Watch Elita and Bryan’s interview with Aurora TV. 

Looking forward with gratitude

As we reflect on this holiday season, we’re reminded that every event we attend, every story we share, and every person we reach brings us one step closer to less people waiting for a life-saving and healing donation. To our advocates – your dedication makes miracles possible every single day.

From all of us at Donor Alliance, thank you for being part of our community and helping us share the greatest gift we can give: the gift of life. Say yes to giving the gift of life at Donate Life Colorado or Donate Life Wyoming.

How Deceased Donors Are Helping to Redefine Treatment for Blood Cancers

Bone marrow transplants, also known as stem cell transplants, are a critical treatment for more than 75 diseases, including blood cancers and other diseases that affect the body’s ability to produce healthy blood cells. Replacing damaged marrow with healthy stem cells restores the body’s ability to generate red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.

The Challenge of Finding a Match

Matching donors to recipients is crucial. Historically, receiving a bone marrow transplant relied solely on living donors who were registered and submitted a cheek swab kit to a database.

Bone Marrow TransplantMatching is based on human leukocyte antigen (HLA) markers. The closer the match, the lower the risk of complications. Registries like NMDP (formerly Be the Match) help connect patients with suitable donors, but finding a perfect match is often difficult.

Innovative Cell Recovery Through Organ Donation

A ground-breaking partnership between Donor Alliance and Ossium Health is expanding the potential for bone marrow donation. The collaboration allows bone marrow recovery from deceased organ and tissue donors.

While traditional searches for a living donor can take 3-5 months (a wait many patients cannot afford), the partnership enables bone marrow transplants to be performed much quicker, often within just 72 hours.

This speed is achieved by recovering vertebral bodies (spine bones) from deceased organ and tissue donors. Ossium Health processes these donations to recover bone marrow from the interior of the bone, removing fat and tissue to isolate the vital cells.

Why it matters: This approach allows stem cells to be recovered from deceased donors and stored for future use. Historically, patients needed a perfect 8/8 HLA match to avoid rejection. However, thanks to advanced processing that depletes the specific cells that cause rejection and new post-transplant protocols, doctors can now perform successful transplants even with partial matches. This expands the pool of potential recipients, covering an estimated 95% of blood cancer patients at full scale.

Real-World Impact: A Historic Milestone at Ohio State

The power of this innovation was recently proven at Ohio State University (OSU) in what is likely the fastest bone marrow transplant ever performed.

In July, a leukemia patient at OSU was prepped for a transplant when their scheduled living donor had a sudden adverse reaction to medication and could not donate. With the patient in a critical state and a traditional search taking too long, the medical team contacted Ossium Health.

Because of a heroic donor in our region, Ossium Health located a match immediately. They physically drove the cells to the transplant center, and the transplant occurred within just two days of the request.

The results were remarkable. The patient began producing new blood cells in just 17 days and has remained cancer-free with no rejection episodes. The groundbreaking case study was presented at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) conference, demonstrating to the world that deceased donor bone marrow is a viable, life-saving reality.

Donor Alliance’s Role

As part of our mission to save lives through organ and tissue donation, Donor Alliance has expanded our impact by collaborating with innovative partners like Ossium Health. Through this partnership, we:

· Identify potential bone marrow recovery opportunities from deceased donors.

· Coordinate matching and delivery of preserved stem cells with transplant centers.

· Ensure ethical, respectful handling of every donation.

· Help transform a single donor’s gift into multiple life-saving outcomes.

Ethical Oversight

Every donation, whether it comes from a living volunteer or a deceased donor, is handled with deep care and responsibility. To ensure the highest quality of cells, strict criteria are followed, including:

· Fully informed consent from donors and their families.

· Recovery within strict time limits (usually under 8 hours) to ensure cell viability.

· Oversight by federal health agencies, including the FDA and HRSA.

At Donor Alliance, we treat each donation as an act of generosity. Every donation is handled with deep care, ensuring that a single donor’s gift is maximized to help patients who might otherwise have no hope.

Learn More or Get Involved

If you’re inspired to take action, here’s how to start:

· Join the NMDP Registry

· Register as an organ and tissue donor in Colorado

·Register in Wyoming

·Learn more about Ossium Health’s innovations

December 12, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 12, 2025

The Hesters know what it means to give and receive the gift of life.  Two family members have gotten organ transplants and a third became a donor after passing.

December 10, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 10, 2025

When Krystal and Tom lost their 5-year-old daughter, Aurora, in 2024, their world changed forever. Krystal describes Aurora as ‘joy-personified’. She was always singing, dancing, and finding a way to make the people around her feel loved. Even in her final moments, Aurora’s love and generosity lived on, carrying forward through organ donation. 

“When she left, it felt like the only right decision was to donate,” Krystal shared. “In fact, one of her favorite movies, ‘Frozen 2’, has a song called ‘The Next Right Thing,’ and it’s something that helped me to make that decision along with her father.” 

In the hardest moment of their lives, they thought about Aurora and the way she always reached out to others. Choosing to help others felt like a meaningful way to honor her. 

Tom recalls sharing one of life’s important lessons with Aurora, saying, “Look out for the helpers in life. You will always find people who are helping,” inspired by Mr. Rogers. 

“She saved the life of a nurse,” shared Krystal. “It’s pretty powerful that my little girl got to help a helper.” 

Aurora’s generosity brought hope and healing to many families, and her legacy lives on in the lives she saved. She was honored by her family organizing the 2nd largest team at this year’s Wyoming Donor Dash 5K in Casper, walking alongside others whose lives have been touched by organ, eye, and tissue donation. Aurora’s legacy continues to shine in every life  she touched. 

 

December 5, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 5, 2025

When you say yes to registering as an organ, eye, and tissue donor at the Driver License Office, it’s more than a quick decision at the counter. It’s a decision that can carry forward long after your own life is over. But you might wonder: what organs can be donated?

Do you know what organs can be donated and transplanted?

Organ donation is giving the gift of life by providing one organ, multiple organs, or a partial organ for transplant into one or more people.

While the list of organs and tissues that can be successfully transplanted continues to grow with advances in technology, eight major organs can be transplanted after death. Living donation is another incredible way you can help save the life of someone waiting for an organ transplant.

Which Organs Can Deceased Donors Donate?

Deceased organ donation is giving the gift of life after you pass away by providing an organ, organs or a partial organ to be transplanted into one or more people. A deceased donor can donate and save up to eight lives by donating organs after death. The major organs that can be transplanted include the heart, intestines, kidneys, liver, lungs, and pancreas. In some cases, the liver can even be split to help two people.

Saying ‘yes’ to donation is saying yes to giving hope. It’s a way to make something meaningful out of loss and give someone a second chance at life.

To make your decision to sign up as an organ, eye, and tissue donor, register here in Colorado or Wyoming.

Which Organs Can Living Donors Donate?

Living donation is another option to give the gift of life to a person in need of a transplant. Living donation is not part of the Donate Life Colorado Organ and Tissue Donor Registry and should be discussed directly with a transplant center. Although Donor Alliance is not involved in this donation process, it’s an incredible way you can help save the life of someone waiting for a transplant.

A living person can donate a kidney or part of the liver, lung, intestine or pancreas to another person in need of a transplant. Each potential living donor must go through a full medical evaluation that includes lab tests, a physical examination, and a psycho-social examination. The decision about whether to accept the living donor is then made by the health care team at the transplant center.

Living kidney donation is the most common living donation and helps save thousands of lives each year. Donating a portion of one’s lung, liver, pancreas and intestine are more rare circumstances. You can learn more about living donation and transplant centers in our area to see if living donation is an option for you.

We encourage you to learn the facts about organ, eye and tissue donation so you can make an informed decision. Then, sign up anytime online, and each time you get your driver’s license or state ID at your local Driver Licenses Office in Colorado, we honor your most recent decision, so it is important to say ‘yes’ every time.

Remember to always share your heroic and lifesaving decision with your family and loved ones.

December 4, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 4, 2025

This holiday season, I want to thank a group of people who may not often hear how much their work matters: the dedicated employees at our Colorado DMV offices who help people register as organ, eye, and tissue donors.

December 3, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 3, 2025

Celebrating 35 years of community cheer, your Greater Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce proudly presents the Cheyenne Christmas Parade!

The parade winds its way through the historic downtown of Cheyenne. This year’s theme is “Candyland Christmas” and you can join Donate Life Wyoming as a Lifesaver to inspire the public to give the gift of life this holiday season!

See parade route for location details!

December 3, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

December 3, 2025
November 24, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

November 24, 2025

Join Donor Alliance at this free, fun holiday event that includes fun activities, sweet treats, magical light displays, performances from Aurora Dance Hearts and the one and only Santa Claus.

November 24, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

November 24, 2025
November 18, 2025

Donation Essentials Blog

November 18, 2025

In 2025, 60% of licensed drivers in the state were registered as organ donors. Colorado consistently ranks as one of the two states with the highest rate of organ donors.

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