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The Great Registration Race for DonateLife Week: Call for 100,000 Australians to register as organ and tissue donors

With organ donation dropping by 20 percent due to the pandemic, more than 1800 Australians are languishing on waiting lists. Here’s how you can save lives. All it takes is one minute to save a life. This message is for 13 million Australians aged 16 and over eligible to register as organ and tissue donors – but haven’t. With organ donation dropping by 20 percent due to the pandemic, more than 1800 Australians are languishing on waiting lists, with another 12,000 on dialysis. In the lead-up to The Great Registration Race for DonateLife Week from July 225 to August 1, the Federal government and the Organ and Tissue Authority (OTA) are calling on the nation to realize how simple it is to make a difference.

“The Great Registration Race for DonateLife Week is all about encouraging 100,000 Australians to register as organ and tissue donors,” Federal Regional Health Minister Dr. David Gillespie – also the Minister responsible for organ and tissue donation – said. “It doesn’t matter how old you are, your medical history, your lifestyle, your country, or how healthy you are – you can register as an organ and tissue donor. It only takes one minute at donatelife.gov.au/register.” As the decision to donate organs and tissues ultimately comes down to the family, the 2020 Australian Donation and Transplantation Activity Report found registrations helped them make the difficult decision.

Registration Race

It showed that nine in 10 families consented to donation when their family member was a registered donor, compared to only four in 10 families agreeing when their deceased loved one’s intentions were unknown. “We know more families say ‘yes’ to donation in hospital – if you are in the situation where donation is possible – if you are registered or your family knows you want to donate,” Dr Gillespie said. “So register and talk with your family.” Approximately 170,000 Australians die annually, with around 80,000 occurring in Australian hospitals – a prerequisite for qualifying as a suitable donor.

Only two percent of these hospital deaths can be considered for organ donation,n and in 2020, this meant only about 1250 people died in a way where organ donation could have been considered. Requests to families were made in 1170 cases, with 680 families saying ‘yes’. Of these, 463 became eligible donors, saving the lives of 1270 organ recipients. A new YouGov poll found that six in 10 people mistakenly believed some people couldn’t become organ donors when they die due to cancer, smoking, drinking, old age, and general unhealthiness. 40percentt of organ donors in 2020 were current smokers when they died; 10 percent had recovered from cancer (mostly skin cancer); and more than 10 percent had diabetes.

Age is also no barrier – 70 organ and tissue donors in 2020 were aged 65 and over,r and surprisingly, corneas from older people are often better for eye donation. OTA CEO Lucinda Barry said: “A recent poll of 60,000 Australians (ABC Australia Talks survey) showed four out of five say they’d be willing to donate their organs when they die. “So the problem isn’t that people are against organ and tissue donation – it’s that they’re not sure if they’re eligible to sign up, mistakenly think they’re already registered, or simply don’t know how to register.” Discuss with your family and join The Great Registration Race in less than a minute by signing up as an organ and tissue donor: donatelife.gov.au/register.

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I have always enjoyed writing and reading other people's blogs. I started writing a journal as a teenager and have since written numerous books and articles. My blog is a place where I can write freely about my personal interests and those of others.

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