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Donate Life California Issues Statement on Hand and Face Transplants Being Regulated as Organ Transplants

SAN DIEGO, Calif., Jan. 23, 2014 – The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) is developing new policies over the next few months that will likely deem hand and face transplants as “standard” organ transplants. These “reconstructive transplants” are currently considered experimental and rare, but have helped a few dozen Americans who were disabled or disfigured in accidents, by illness or in combat. It’s expected that the new UNOS regulations will include a waiting list for hand and face transplants.

This new development presents a challenge to organ, eye and tissue donor registries across the country, including Donate Life California. Right now, when Californians register to be organ, eye and tissue donors, they do so with an understanding that hearts, lungs, kidneys, livers, pancreas and intestines could possibly be donated, along with cornea, skin, bone and other tissue.

While the idea of donation and transplantation has been generally limited to life-saving solid organs and life-healing tissues, this new ability to transplant hands and faces to help those disfigured is truly a life-changing opportunity. In an effort to be clear about the intentions of the millions of Californians who have generously registered as donors, families of potential hand and face donors will be asked to provide a separate authorization to ensure their understanding of these additional gifts.

The Donate Life California Board of Directors has released the following statement:

“California Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) have chosen to directly speak with families and seek authorization for hand, face, and other Vascularized Composite Allograft donations when a match is a possibility because these were not organs or tissue routinely recovered for transplant at the time the 10.5 million registered donors in California made their choice to be donors.”

Donate Life California anticipates reaching 11 million registered organ, eye and tissue donors in the state of California by April, Donate Life Month. With each new sign up, either by checking “YES!” at the DMV or by registering online at www.donateLIFEcalifornia.org, Americans on the transplant waiting list are hopeful they will be given a second chance at life.

About Donate Life California:
The Donate Life California Organ & Tissue Donor Registry is the nonprofit, state-authorized organ, eye and tissue donor registry, which records the decision to donate in a confidential database that is searched by authorized organ and tissue recovery personnel at the time of an actual donation opportunity. It is administered by Donate Life California and four nonprofit, federally designated organ recovery organizations: Donor Network West , Lifesharing, OneLegacy and Sierra Donor Services. As a state-authorized public service, the registry assures that all personal information is kept confidential and stored in a secure database, accessible only to authorized organ and tissue recovery personnel.

For more information about the Donate Life California Registry, how donation saves and improves lives, and to sign up, please visit www.donateLIFEcalifornia.org or in Spanish at www.doneVIDAcalifornia.org.

Fast Facts from Donate Life California:

– One in five on the U.S. organ transplant waiting list lives in California.
– In 2012, more than 1,100 people died in our state waiting for a life-saving organ transplant.
– All major religions support or permit organ, eye and tissue donation.
– Anyone can register to be an organ, eye and tissue donor regardless of age, ethnicity or medical history.

Please visit Donate Life California’s Stories of Hope web page to read inspiring stories about organ and tissue donors and recipients from around the state.

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High concentration of Azithromycin in infected tissues is also caused by the fact that phagocytes and macrophages transport it to the site of infection and release in the area of inflammation. Azithromycin is prescribed in case of illness or injury at the time.

OneLegacy Sets U.S. Record with 1,374 Transplanted Organs in 2013

Greater Los Angeles Non-Profit Helped to Save and Heal More Than 100,000 Lives Through Organ, Eye and Tissue Donation

LOS ANGELES, Calif., Jan. 14, 2014 – OneLegacy, the non-profit, federally designated organ, eye and tissue recovery organization serving the seven-county greater Los Angeles area, announced a new annual benchmark for U.S. organ recovery organizations with 1,374 organs recovered and transplanted and a record 2,044 eye and tissue donors in 2013.

“In 2013, donors and their families cared for by OneLegacy gave a record number of life-saving organs to patients awaiting transplants in California, throughout the nation, and even in Canada when there were no matches with U.S. patients,” announced Tom Mone, chief executive officer of OneLegacy. “This accomplishment was achieved thanks to the decisions by individuals and families to give life to others, as well as OneLegacy’s implementation of innovative donor management techniques that enabled the successful transplant of more organs from each donor to better serve transplant centers and their patients.”

Last year, OneLegacy recovered organs from a total of 422 deceased donors, the second highest in its history. The organization made enormous strides in helping each donor save as many lives as possible, reaching 3.26 organs transplanted per donor, five percent higher then the U.S. average. Mone attributed this development to the use of an intensivist consultation program that has made lungs and hearts more viable for transplant. The 172 hearts transplanted represented an increase of 38 percent after three years of virtually no gains, and the 247 lungs transplanted was up 28 percent in one year with both hearts and lungs transplant rates 40% higher than U.S. averages.

OneLegacy also set a record for the organization by recovering tissue and corneas from 2,044 donors. Patients nationwide can be thankful for tissue donors who provided skin used for abdominal repairs and burn dressings, bone to repair fractures and prevent amputation, heart valves to repair life-threatening defects, tendons to repair major knee injuries, veins for cardiac bypass surgery, and corneas to end blindness.

Driving OneLegacy’s organ recovery activity was an organ authorization rate of 71 percent, the second-highest in the organization’s history. With seven out of ten organ donation opportunities authorized either by the individual (through donor designation, primarily via the California DMV) or the donor’s family, Southland residents expressed their generosity in the most profound of ways: with a living legacy to those in need.

The most marked increase in authorization rate was among African Americans, a community with high rates of organ failure but where donation is frequently viewed with mistrust. The African American authorization rate of 75 percent is up five points since last year and 17 points (nearly 30 percent) in two years. The Caucasian population also saw a significant increase in donation rates, from 78 to 89 percent in one year.

The authorization rate among the two other major ethnic groups decreased, however. The rate among Latinos decreased from 72 to 68 percent, while the rate among Asians also decreased from a record high of 58 percent in 2012 to 48 percent last year, with both results heavily influenced by the language and cultural issues associated with recent immigration, as identified in a demographic study conducted for OneLegacy by researchers at Cal Poly Pomona and Loma Linda University.

Seeking to increase donation rates throughout the region’s large and challengingly diverse population, OneLegacy is preparing to launch a major multicultural community development initiative supported by media and led by six full-time employees. The initiative will focus on holding the exceptional gains among African Americans and Caucasians and inspiring Latino and Asian communities – especially first-generation immigrants who are less familiar with the process – to understand the value that donation provides to both recipients and donor families.

Notably, over 40 percent of organ, eye and tissue donors recovered through OneLegacy’s stewardship were authorized by the Donate Life California Registry, which counts over 10.7 million registered donors statewide.

With more than 200 hospitals, 10 transplant centers and a diverse population of nearly 20 million, OneLegacy is the largest organ, eye and tissue recovery organization in the world. For more information, call OneLegacy at (800) 786-4077 or visit www.onelegacy.org.

Those wishing to make the commitment to donate may register online at www.donateLIFEcalifornia.org or its Spanish-language counterpart, www.doneVIDAcalifornia.org.

High concentration of Azithromycin in infected tissues is also caused by the fact that phagocytes and macrophages transport it to the site of infection and release in the area of inflammation. Azithromycin is prescribed in case of illness or injury at the time.

Heart Recipient & Donate Life Float rider AJ Reyes Featured on Fil-Am TV in Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES, Calif., Jan. 14, 2014 – Heart recipient and 2014 Donate Life Float rider Arthur Jovan “AJ” Reyes was featured on Kababayan Today, a Filipino-American television program on LA 18, on Friday, Jan. 10, 2014.

AJ was in college when a rare viral infection attacked his heart. He was kept alive with a mechanical heart and placed on the organ transplant waiting list. He wasn’t sure he would live long enough to get that life-saving transplant. But at the age of 25, he got the call, a donor heart was available. Now, he runs half-marathons to honor his donor, Justin Olivera, a corrections officer who died from injuries he suffered in a motorcycle crash in November of 2010.

AJ also honored his donor when he was chosen to represent Donor Network West (formerly CTDN) as a rider on the 2014 Donate Life Rose Parade Float in Pasadena, Calif. on New Year’s Day. AJ talked about how grateful he is to Justin and his family in a two-part interview with Janelle So. The interview features video of the first time AJ met Justin’s parents.

Part 1:

Part 2:

Read more about AJ on the Donate Life Float website.

High concentration of Azithromycin in infected tissues is also caused by the fact that phagocytes and macrophages transport it to the site of infection and release in the area of inflammation. Azithromycin is prescribed in case of illness or injury at the time.