At its June 2003 board meeting, the UNOS board meeting adopted the following resolution:
"WHEREAS the consensus among transplant professionals, donor families, and transplant candidates and recipients attending the UNOS Research to Practice Consensus Conference regarding organ donation was that, to the extent medically feasible, the wishes of those who give the gift of life through organ donation by executing a valid anatomical gift instrument
indicating their wish to become an organ donor upon death should be honored,
IT IS THEREFORE RESOLVED that the OPTN/UNOS Board of Directors endorses the principle that the wishes of organ donors should be honored upon death to the extent medically feasible and that state and federal laws should reflect such principle. To that end, the OPTN/UNOS Board of Directors strongly encourages the adoption and full implementation in all states of the provisions of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act as amended pertaining to honoring the donor's wishes and the adoption of legislation expressly prohibiting valid organ donations from being reversed after the donor's death or declined for any reason other than medical suitability."
Since UNOS supports a person's right to become a donor, it should also state that it supports a donor's right to donate his/her organs first to another donor. UNOS hasn't done that yet, but their support isn't needed. Your organs are yours, and the law says you can decide who gets them. UNOS has stated it won't block a LifeSharers member's wish to give his/her organs to another member.
Click here to subscribe to this blog