NYLON — The New York State Senate has passed legislation meant to encourage more New Yorkers to become organ and tissue donors.
According to a press release from Senator Patrick Gallivan, the bills, which have been sent to the Assembly for review, focus on enhancing public awareness and increasing the number of New Yorkers who sign up to help save lives through organ, tissue, bone marrow, and blood donation.
“Nearly 10,000 New Yorkers are in need of an organ transplant, but the vast majority of residents are not enrolled in the state’s Donate Life Registry,” said Gallivan. “This legislation raises awareness of the need for organ and tissue donations and encourages New Yorkers to consider participating in this life saving program.”
Only 25 percent of potential New Yorkers are enrolled in the New York State Donate Life Registry, the second lowest rate in the nation. The Senate has been advocating for additional resources and raising public awareness of the importance of organ and tissue donation through legislation and funding.
The state budget, which passed earlier in April, included $1 million to support the New York Alliance for Donation, an increase of $750,000 over last year, as part of the Senate’s ongoing commitment to help New Yorkers in dire need of transplants.
Among the legislation passed by the Senate for review in the Assembly:
A bill intended to help educate high school students about organ, tissue, bone marrow, and blood donation. In New York, the current age of consent to register as a bone marrow and organ and tissue donor is 18. The age of consent to donate blood is 17 (or 16 with parental consent).
This is intended to help high school students make informed decisions when they reach the age of consent by requiring state Education officials to develop recommendations for instruction in blood, bone marrow, organ, and tissue donations and the life saving benefits each provide.
A bill meant to lowering the age of consent for New Yorkers who choose to become an organ donor. New York is one of only four states in the nation that requires an individual be 18 or older to enroll in an organ and tissue donor registry. This leaves young people without a mechanism to document their consent to donate and puts parents in the difficult situation of having to assume what their teenage child would have wanted should a tragedy occur.
This is intended to give New Yorkers aged 16 or older who wish to consent to donation the ability to enroll in the state’s Donate Life Registry. However, in the event that the young person may be considered for organ, eye, or tissue donation, the parents of that individual will be notified and given the final authorization for donation to take place.
A bill meant to provide an additional opportunity for New Yorkers to enroll as an organ and tissue donor. All applicants for health insurance offered through the state health benefit exchange would be provided space during the application process to register for the Donate Life Registry for organ, eye, and tissue donations.
A bill that would make ‘Lauren’s Law’ permanent in New York. Lauren’s Law is named after 12-year-old heart transplant survivor Lauren Shields of Stony Point, New York, and makes it easier to choose to be a donor when enrolling for a driver’s license. The law prohibits a driver’s license application from being processed unless the organ donation section is filled out. Applicants have to check a box stating ‘yes’ or ‘skip this question.’ Prior to the law’s enactment, filling out the organ donation section on the application was optional. The law is currently set to expire in October.
A bill intended to help medical transport teams operate within their necessary and sensitive time frames. The bill would add human organ delivery vehicles to the list of authorized emergency vehicles in the state.
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