Living-kidney donors must be age 18 or older, be in
good physical and mental health, and be willing and fully prepared to undertake
the transplant process. Every prospective donor is evaluated individually, and
factors such as race and gender do not come into play when our team considers a
successful match.
If a prospective living-kidney recipient’s blood type
is:
- O, a prospective donor’s blood
type must also be type O
- A, a prospective donor’s blood
type can be type A or O
- B, a prospective donor’s blood
type can be type B or O
- AB, a prospective donor’s blood type
can be type A, B, AB, or O
About the Donation Process at UT Southwestern
We assign each prospective kidney donor to a living
donor coordinator, a social worker, a transplant nephrologist (kidney doctor),
and a transplant surgeon. Our team then thoroughly evaluates each prospective
donor to ensure good health and to determine if his or her kidney is
biologically compatible with someone who needs one.
The prospective donor also meets with an independent
living donor advocate to ensure that the prospective donor’s interests and
rights are being protected and that he or she is under no pressure to donate.
It is important to note that
donor participation is completely voluntary, and prospective living-kidney
donors may decide not to participate at any time during the transplant process
without repercussions. A person’s decision to opt out of donating a kidney for
any reason is private and kept confidential.