Donation Essentials Blog

Living Donation: How Can I Help?

Living Donor graphic

Nearly 2,000 Colorado and Wyoming residents are waiting on a lifesaving transplant. While Donor Alliance works exclusively with deceased donors and their families, living donation is another way people can help save lives and spare many of the individuals on the transplant list from what can be a lengthy wait.

Local Need:

Of those in Colorado and Wyoming waiting for a transplant, more than 1,400 are in need of a kidney and just over 350 are waiting on a liver, both of which can be donated by living donors.

There are four transplant centers within our region that work with living donors: Porter Adventist Hospital, Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center, Children’s Hospital Colorado and University of Colorado Hospital.

Three Ways Living Donors Can Help:

1.) The most common type of living donation is called directed donation. In a directed donation, the donor names the specific person to receive the transplant, whom is often a family member, friend, coworker or acquaintance.

2.) Some people wish to be a living donor even though they do not personally know someone in need of a transplant. This is known as a non-directed donation. In a non-directed donation, the match is arranged based on medical compatibility with a patient in need.

3.) A third living donation option is called paired exchange. When blood tests reveal that a donor is not compatible for a directed donation with their intended recipient, both the donor and recipient may choose to exchange or “trade” with another incompatible donor-recipient pair. A living donor advocate can discuss this option with donors and recipients if they are not a match.

Paired Exchange living donation

Source: UNOS

2018 Living Donation Stats:

According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), there were nearly 6,900 living donor transplants in 2018 – the most since 2005, increasing 11 percent over 2017!

living donation stats

Source: UNOS

Learn more about living donation, here or contact your local transplant center.

Remember, while not everyone can be a living donor, everyone CAN be a donor after death. To sign up to be an organ, eye and tissue donor after death, visit your state registry website, DonateLifeColorado.org or DonateLifeWyoming,org.

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