UM Beats OSU in Organ Donation Contest

Submitted by w2j2 on

I know this should be on MGoBoard, but my points were stripped.....

http://www2.med.umich.edu/prmc/media/newsroom/details.cfm?ID=1843 

Michigan takes home Wolverine-Buckeye challenge trophy for first time, assisted by support from U-M football coach Rich Rodriguez

Ann Arbor, Mich. - U-M racked up a victory over Ohio State this week, signing up more people to the state’s organ donor list and winning the annual Wolverine-Buckeye challenge.

U-M signed up 79,958 donors to Ohio State’s 57,083 in the challenge that ended at midnight on Thanksgiving.

"We all enjoy winning a victory against our rival from Ohio," says Tony Denton, Executive Director of University Hospitals and Chief Operating Officer, U-M Hospitals and Health Centers.

"But the real winners will be the people who rely on these life-saving gifts, organs and tissues that will give thousands of people a second chance at life," Denton says.

Every day, 19 people die while waiting for an organ transplant and another 138 people are added to the national waiting list. The University of Michigan Health System began a new effort this year, dubbed Wolverines For Life, to encourage organ, tissue, eye, blood, and bone marrow donation by U-M employees, patients, students, alumni, fans and everyone in the state of Michigan.

To kick off this effort, U-M Football Coach Rich Rodriguez, along with Health System leaders, encouraged people to join in the annual Wolverine-Buckeye challenge. The challenge allowed people to sign up as organ donors upon their death and have their pledge tallied for their favorite school.

Rodriguez did radio spots and shared his weekly press conference Monday with a 16-year-old transplant recipient, Andrew Majors. Andrew, who is 16 and goes to Eisenhower High School in Shelby Township, Mich., received both a liver and kidney transplant as a baby at the University of Michigan Health System.

Anne Murphy, administrator of the University of Michigan Transplant Center, thanks Coach Rodriguez and the entire football staff for helping promote the annual challenge. This is the first time U-M has won the contest since it began in 2006.

"Organ donation saves lives. Anybody can sign up to be an organ donor. We hope this win will continue to draw awareness to the importance of signing your state’s donor registry to make sure your decision is respected after your death," Murphy says.

"We will be thrilled to accept and display the Wolverine-Buckeye challenge trophy for the next year."

The U-M leaders emphasize that after signing up as donors, every U-M fan should tell family members or other loved ones they have done so.

U-M co-sponsors the Wolverine-Buckeye Challenge with Gift of Life Michigan, which is the state’s federally designated organ and tissue recovery organization. You can still sign up on the state’s donor registry at www.giftoflifemichigan.org. Gift of Life Michigan, in collaboration with the Michigan Eye-Bank, provides all services necessary for organ, tissue and eye donation.

U-M has one of the oldest and largest transplantation programs in the country and U-M surgeons perform transplants of hearts, lungs, pancreases, livers, kidneys, and corneas. About 400 to 450 transplants are done at U-M annually, mostly kidney transplants followed by liver, heart, lung and pancreas.

Comments

jam706

November 29th, 2010 at 9:08 AM ^

I worked in the Transplant Center all four years I was in school, and it's an amazing place. The amount of work put in at every level is astounding; there I met some of the hardest working people I've ever known. Organ donation is an amazing gift, you really might save someone's life just by filling out a form. In my four years I spoke to hundreds of people waiting on their transplant, many lonely or depressed, but a surprising number of them were cheerful and optimistic. Organ transplants have a stigma surrounding them that most branches of medicine don't have to deal with, like the idea that doctors will let you die if you're an organ donor, or that all people who need transplants are alcoholics. These are far from the truth, and it's brightened my week to see such a successful donor drive this year. Hail to the leaders and best!

Sean@MATW

November 29th, 2010 at 9:36 AM ^

Remember - you can donate Bone Marrow, too!  It's easy and involves sitting in a chair for a couple of hours.  Guys like Phil Brabbs depend on people who join the registry and donate.  If you join the registry you get a cheek swab and you'll only be called if there is a match.  Check out the URL below for more info:

http://www.marrow.org/JOIN/index.html

Cheri

November 29th, 2010 at 1:29 PM ^

Before you sign up, be aware that donating bone marrow, while a much better process than it was even 10 years ago, is not a painless process.  If you sign up, and are found to be a match, Be The Match and Do The Job!  I read a heartwrenching article a couple of weeks ago about a woman needing a donation.   Four matches were found. All four declined to donate.  The woman died.

stevemc_777

November 29th, 2010 at 1:56 PM ^

Not a fair contest considering the poor condition of most buckeye livers. Thousands probably turned away.

 

Seriously, Very nice. My cousin's life was saved by a liver donation and the good people at the University of Michigan who were all first class. Go Blue always.