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New Volunteer Orientation 101. Sharon Ross Director of Public Relations & Community Outreach Donate Life San Diego Executive Director. I Have the Best Job Ever – Story teller. Meet Some of Our Recent Volunteers. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: New Volunteer Orientation 101
Page 2: New Volunteer Orientation 101

New Volunteer Orientation 101Sharon Ross

Director of Public Relations & Community Outreach

Donate Life San Diego Executive Director

Page 3: New Volunteer Orientation 101

I Have the Best Job Ever – Story teller

Page 4: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Meet Some of Our Recent

Volunteers

Tisa Kourtney Adyhan

Page 5: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Meet Some of Our Recent

Volunteers

Tisa Kourtney Adyhan

With Your Help, When We Save a Life,

We Save Lifetimes … and Future Generations

Page 6: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Suzanne

nearly 26/

• Living Donation California will be announced April 23

• Current wait for a kidney here is now 10 years.

• You can also help by asking us to speak elsewhere,

sharing what you’ve learned & posting our link.

Page 7: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Myth-busting Inspiration

Page 8: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Myth-busting Inspiration

Page 9: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Waiting – Hoping - Giving

Page 10: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Lifesharing & Donate Life San Diego

Federally-designated organ procurement

organization & FDA-approved Tissue Bank

Serving San Diego & Imperial

counties

Official link between deceased

donors and people waiting for

transplants

The ‘pink dot’ on your license

Page 11: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Lifesharing Priorities

Honor the donor’s wishes

Inform and support

families

Represent people

on the waiting list

Inspire people to

sign up to be donors

Page 12: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Making Tremendous Progress

• Last year local donors saved 263 lives & will help

25,000 people with the precious gift of tissue

• Our 30th anniversary next year

• Largest Registry in nation & Largest Waiting List

10/

Page 13: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Our Mission: To Save Lives Stats as of 2/20/13

117,053 people are on the national organ waiting list

1,761 younger than 18 (78 are under 1)

A new name is added every 11 minutes.

117,053 people are on the national organ waiting list

1,761 younger than 18 (78 are under 1)

A new name is added every 11 minutes.

Today 75 people will receive a second chance at life

But tragically 18 people in the US will die waiting

Locally 1,851 are on the list

Last year 76 San Diegans died waiting

Page 14: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Why do people have to wait?

Page 15: New Volunteer Orientation 101
Page 16: New Volunteer Orientation 101

‘Waiting’ puts Many Lives in Limbo

• FACT: you’re 10 times

more likely to need a

transplant than be a

donor

• FACT: Only 1 in 3 people sign up to be a donor at the DMV because they ‘rule themselves out as donors’

Page 17: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Hope Born from a Bittersweet Day

Page 18: New Volunteer Orientation 101

What Can Be Transplanted

Page 19: New Volunteer Orientation 101

The Facts

    The quality of hospital care is not lessened if the staff knows the patient is willing to be a donor.

Transplant teams do not become involved until other physicians concerned with the patient’s care have determined all possible efforts to save the patient’s life have failed.

  Organs are allocated according to medical criteria like blood type, height, weight, and the urgency of medical need - not according to a patient’s financial, political, social or celebrity status.

Page 20: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Important to Correct Misconceptions!

Donation is consistent with the life-preserving traditions of ALL major U.S. religions.

Donor families tell Lifesharing donation makes sense out of tragedy and helps their grieving.

Recovery occurs in a hospital surgical suite and will not delay funeral plans. An open casket service is still possible.

Donor families incur no expense for donation.

Page 21: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Too May People Think …

Registering to be a Donor is SIMPLE. If you want to help save lives after you’re gone, sign up.

It takes only a minute and can mean a lifetime to someone else!

Registering also allows your family to honor your wishes. Not guess at what you’d want.

Nope! You are NEVER too old or too sick to register.

I’m too old. I’m too sick.

Page 22: New Volunteer Orientation 101

VIPs – Very Important Partners

Our Volunteers!

Our Hospitals

Medical Examiner

First Responders

Funeral Professionals

The San Diego Eye Bank

Page 23: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Interesting Eye Facts

• A person becomes blind every 5 seconds; a child every minute

• 10 million people worldwide could have their sight restored by corneal transplantation

• Most people can donate corneas after death

• Sight: WHAT AN AMAZING GIFT

• One of our blind donors locally gave sight to two people

• An 85-year-old’s gift here enabled a 5-year-old to see!

Page 24: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Did You Know?

• Less than 1% of all people who die can be organ donors; 85% can be tissue donors

• Avoid saying ‘harvest,’ ‘life-support’ & ‘cadaver’

• Children can register at the DMV to be donors, but must be at least 13 online. Valid when 18

• Pink dots printed on license only when you check ‘Yes’ at the DMV. So check yes every time

• By zip code we know how many are waiting, became donors and were transplanted

• Always easy to update registration or change mind

AND you can help us save lives so many ways … with an email, note cards, stuffing stuff

Page 25: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Age of the oldest donor?

110 years old (eyes for research)

25% of donors are > 50

One in 12 donors is > 65

Longest surviving recipient?

50 years + and going strong

How Long Before Recovered Organs/Tissue Must be Transplanted?

Kidneys 24-72 hours Liver 12-18 hours

Heart & Lungs 4-5 hours Pancreas 4 hours

Corneas up to 14 days Joints, Cartilage < 25 days

Skin, Bones, Veins, Valves, Tendons, Ligaments (cryo-preserved) < 5 years

You are NEVER

too old or too

sick to sign up to

be a donor

Remember

Page 26: New Volunteer Orientation 101

There is Encouraging News

• We have reduced deaths waiting here

• Living donors now provide >25% of all

transplants (Next month we launch Living

Donation CA, which will be a US first)

• One person can save up to 8 lives

through organ donation and help 50

people as a tissue donor

Page 27: New Volunteer Orientation 101

How the Public Can Help

• Take a minute to register

• Discuss your wishes with your family before the ICU or ER

• Share your own story

• Hold an eCampaign

• Tell others what you’ve

learned about donation

• Don’t rule yourself out!

• Be an active Volunteer

because we need you!

Page 28: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Key Volunteer Priorities

• Meant to make the most effective use of your time, help us inspire

people to sign up as donors and SAVE LIVES in our communities.

• High Schools

• Hospitals

• DMV

• Or?

Page 29: New Volunteer Orientation 101

AND SOON …You can help

by reserving

a Donate Life CA

License Plate

Page 30: New Volunteer Orientation 101

What’s Happening?

Page 31: New Volunteer Orientation 101

New Website Soon

Page 32: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Check ‘Yes’ at the DMV or sign up online atwww.donateLIFEcalifornia.org or www.doneVIDAcalifornia.org

Total Registrants:

9,915,110(as of Tues., 3/5/13 at 4:55 pm)The DMV adds 5,000 donors/day to the Registry!!!The DMV adds 5,000 donors/day to the Registry!!!

Page 33: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Your Mission: Learn, Have Fun & SAVE LIVES

Page 34: New Volunteer Orientation 101

For more information: Sharon Ross

619-521-1983

[email protected]

Thank you!

We so appreciate your support to help us save lives right here in San Diego!

Page 35: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Introduction Worksheet & Other Tools

Page 36: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Meet Michael & His Extended Family

Page 37: New Volunteer Orientation 101
Page 38: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Brittany

Page 39: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Christopher

Page 40: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Tommy

Page 41: New Volunteer Orientation 101

Tommy’s Mom & Christopher