Organ & Tissue Donation
Charles de Lint, the award winning author wrote, “Every time you do a good deed you shine the light a little farther into the dark. And the thing is, when you're gone that light is going to keep shining on, pushing the shadows back.”
Many of us want to be remembered not only for the person we were, and who we loved, but for the good deeds we’ve done for others. And today, through organ and tissue donation, it’s possible to do very good things for total strangers.
The decision to become an organ and tissue donor offers a precious gift to others: the hope for a new life. As Gift of Hope Organ & Tissue Donor Network, our name reminds people that the gift of donation makes hope possible for the thousands of people waiting for lifesaving organ transplants and life-enhancing tissue transplants. In our logo, the brushstroke above our name represents the life that connects a donor’s gift to the hope it provides the recipients of that gift. The decision to become an organ and tissue donor offers a precious gift to others: the hope for a new life. As Gift of Hope Organ & Tissue Donor Network, our name reminds people that the gift of donation makes hope possible for the thousands of people waiting for lifesaving organ transplants and life-enhancing tissue transplants. In our logo, the brushstroke above our name represents the life that connects a donor’s gift to the hope it provides the recipients of that gift.
Without doubt, there are many opportunities to give of oneself after death. According to the Musculoskeletal Transplant Foundation, more than 120,000 people are waiting for organ transplants in the United States. Sadly, the most recent statistics indicated 6,669 patients die while waiting for organ transplants every year. On average, 20 people died each day because of the shortage of donated organs and a new person is added every 10 minutes.
The Musculoskeletal Transplant Foundation is not only at the core of organ transplantation, but also at the core of a growing phenomenon:tissue transplantation. Fast becoming a routine part of patient care in virtually every hospital and in many doctor's offices across the country, tissue transplantation could not occur without the kind and charitable donations of others.
“These tissue transplants often save limbs from being amputated,” shares the website The Gift of a Lifetime,“and give sight to the blind. They also allow recipients to walk without pain, lift up a young child, or perform other routine activities that most people take for granted.”