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Include an Organ Donation Presentation in the Start of Your School Year

Each fall, thousands of students step onto high school campuses around California for the first time. Over the next four years, they will learn so many things. We hope one piece of that will include an organ donation presentation.

For all the educators out there, the start of the school year is the perfect time to get a presentation on your lesson plan calendar.

As students are heading to get their first driver’s license, they’ll be asked the important question of whether they want to be donors. It’s important to ensure they have all their questions answered before they make their decision.

It’s Now a Part of the Curriculum

In 2012, Governor Jerry Brown signed into law Assembly Bill 1967 which required the health and science frameworks to add information on transplantation and donation. It has since been added to the health framework and will be in the next edition of the science framework.

Donate Life California has worked to create lesson plans and provide educators with resources to help them in preparing for teaching their high school students about donation and transplantation. This can include showing our “Decision to Donate” video, donation related games such as our crossword puzzle, an organ donation presentation, and more.

Why is Discussing Donation in the Classroom Important?

In many cultures, death isn’t a topic we like to talk about. While some students will have discussions at home about donation, many high school students will not be thinking about what they want to happen if they were to pass away. When students fill out their driver’s license application, they will be asked for the first time whether they’d like to register as an organ, eye and tissue donor.

At this point, it is likely that these students haven’t had the chance to learn about, discuss, or ask questions about what donation means.

Having donation and transplantation discussed in the classroom ensures that students are making the best decision for them when they are asked to become a donor.

Does Being a Minor Make a Difference?

In California, you can first sign up for the official organ, eye and tissue donor registry at the age of 13. This is most common when a teenager goes to the DMV for their driver’s license.

While minors may register their intent to become a donor, their parents or legal guardian will still have the final decision on whether their child becomes a donor until they are 18 years old.

At the same time, if a teen wishes to register, their decision to donate will become legally binding when they turn 18. This allows them to ensure their wishes are met as they have the choice to make them.

What Do We Teach Our Students?

First and foremost, it is important to teach students what donation and transplantation are, as well as the facts about the process. There are often myths that are tied to donation and addressing the student’s questions about donation will help them better understand what organ, eye and tissue donation is.

Once students understand the basics of donation, it gives you an opportunity to teach them why donation and transplantation are important. Giving students the opportunity to understand the impact it has on others can help them make the best decision for them.

Additionally, teaching students the importance of discussing donation and their decision with their families is suggested. As noted, minors won’t make the final decision. But even more so, it’s helpful at any age to inform your family members of your wishes after you pass away, even though death isn’t always easy to talk about.

Why Schedule an Organ Donation Presentation?

We’d love to work with you to bring an expert to your classroom when you’re covering donation and transplantation. Having an organ donation presentation as a part of your lesson plan allows you to have an expert answering your students’ questions and allows them to hear personal stories about donation.

While we provide a resource that will answer the most common questions regarding donation, your students might have additional ones you might not yet know the answers to. When you bring in a volunteer or staff member from our local organ procurement organizations, they’ll be able to make sure you’re students questions are answered.

While some students will see the importance of registering as a donor through statistics and facts, some students will be moved by hearing a personal story of how donation has impacted their lives. Whether it is a transplant recipient, living donor, or donor family member who makes the organ donation presentation, this personal connection can make the impact of donation real to your students.

How to Schedule a Presentation?

We have volunteers and staff from the organ procurement organizations around the state that would love to come to your classroom. They’ll work with you to create a presentation that fits your needs and your classroom.

Click here to fill out this form and we’ll put you in contact with your local OPO to get an organ donation presentation on your schedule.

Organ Donation and Whole-Body Donation: What’s the Difference?

One of the most common questions we get at Donate Life California is if a whole-body donation is accepted. Donate Life California is solely responsible for managing the organ and tissue donor registry for California. We can not accept a whole body donation, as dictated by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act.

At Donate Life California, our mission is to save lives through organ and tissue donation. We only focus on recovering organs and tissues to gift to persons on the transplant waiting list. Whole body donation programs are specifically targeted for furthering positive scientific research. These programs vary in their scope and research – from developing cures to diseases to understanding additional functions of the human body – all of which are noteworthy and laudable causes, as well.

One organ and tissue donor can save 8 lives and restore health to over 75 others.

Whole-body donation, on the other hand, is a different type of program when a donor’s body is gifted to an entity (normally a research university) for research or educational purposes. In most cases, these programs keep the donor’s body and do not return it, or only do when they finish with their research.

How Does The Organ Recovery Process Work?

When one of our local organ procurement organizations receives a referral for an organ donor, the donation process begins and usually takes around 24 hours. Once the process is complete and we have recovered all of the viable organs and tissue possible, we coordinate the return of the donor’s body to a hospital, mortuary, or funeral home. The donor family can then proceed with whatever burial rites

Organ donation provides a life-line to those on the transplant waiting list.

Donate Life California cannot legally keep a body once the donation procedure has finished. We do not provide any cremation or burial services. We will arrange for any necessary transportation and cover any costs. Once we return the body to the donor family, they can proceed to with any funeral arrangements they planned.

For additional information on the donation process, click here.

Can I Be Registered for both Organ Donation and Whole-Body Donation?

A quick answer to this question: it depends on the program you signed up with. Some whole-body donor programs may have a need for a donor’s entire body for research purposes. They may request that you refrain from being an organ and/or tissue donor. Other whole-body donation programs may focus on a specific body part, organ, or tissue that may not be able to be recovered for gifting, but other organs and tissue would be recoverable to gift to those on the transplant waiting list.

Register to be an organ donor today.

If you are both an organ donor and whole-body donor, we suggest that you contact your whole-body donation program. This way, you can clarify what their program needs so that your donation wishes are respected. Whether you are a registered organ donor or a whole-body donor (or both!), you are giving yourself to a cause greater than you and we thank you for helping save lives.

To sign up as an organ and tissue donor and help save up to eight lives and affect another seventy-five, click here.

Donate Life California Honors Navy Veteran & Mother Bonnie Walker on Donate Life Rose Parade Float

This year Donate Life California is continuing its tradition of sponsoring a floragraph on the Donate Life Rose Parade Float by honoring Bonnie Walker of El Cajon, California as an organ & tissue donor. On January 1st, 2018 during the 129th Rose Parade, Bonnie Walker will be one of 44 donors honored on the Donate Life float, The Gift of Time.

Donate Life Rose Parade Float, Gift of Time

Born Bonnie Lee Kleindolph on February 6, 1940, in Muscatine, Iowa. She spent part of her childhood growing up in Iowa and part in Tucumcari, New Mexico. After high school, she enlisted in the United States Navy and was placed at the Dental Office at the Naval Station in San Diego.

In 1961, she married Robert Walker. At this time Bonnie left the Navy and they started their family. They spent a short time in Long Beach then settled down in El Cajon, California where they were married for 42 years and raised 5 children.

Her daughter Tanya McClain describes her more as “a very giving and unselfish parent who took great pride in being actively involved with all the school and extra-curricular activities us kids took part in.”

Donate Life Floragraph Honoree

“Our mother loved to read and watch parades on TV. Every New Year’s Day we would watch the Rose Parade. The floats were her favorite and being on one would have ‘tickled her pink’ as she would say. “

Bonnie was 63 when she passed away on June 1st, 2003 from cardiac arrest. She was able to donate her corneas which went to two different people. It’s wonderful that she was able to give the gift of sight to two precious recipients.

She is survived by her husband, Robert; 5 children, Tanya, Tammy, Sherina, Robert II and Kristina; brother, Roy; 4 grandchildren, Cody, Cole, Brianna and Tristan. Of course, now there are 3 more grandkids, Cheyenne, Connor and Emma and even 2 great grandkids, Zoe and Layla.

Each year Donate Life California honors a donor connected to the California Department of Motor Vehicles to say thank you for the support provided in registering organ and tissue donors around the state of California. In our eleven year partnership, we’ve been able to register over 14 million donors in the state of California. Tanya McClain, our honoree’s daughter, is the Manager of the San Clemente Field Office.

In October, Tanya and her son were able to decorate the Floragraph honoring her mother that will be included on this year’s float.

Donate Life Floragraph Decorating

Kick off your new year right by joining Donate Life as we honor donors during the Rose Parade on January 1, 2018!