Organ Donor
In ICD10 see
Legacy Content
This page is about the pre-ICD10 diagnosis coding schema. See the ICD10 Diagnosis List, or the following for similar diagnoses in ICD10:Organ donor (organ/tissue donation by the donor)Click Expand to show legacy content.
see also Dispo field, which allows "Died - Organ_Donor" as an option
Diagnosis for patients who are major organ donors (not eyes, skin or bones).
Collection process for Organ Donor who has been declared braindead
See Deceased patients#General instructions for deceased patients
Collection process for living Organ Donor (donor and recipient)
- Go to: Renal Transplant
Data Use
This data is reported in the Quarterly report.
Data Integrity Checks (automatic list)
none found
Background
Organ donation is the removal of the tissues of the human body from a person who has recently died, or from a living donor, for the purpose of transplanting.
Organs that can be procured include: the heart, intestines, kidneys, lungs, liver, pancreas. These are procured from a brain dead donor or a donor where the family has given consent for donation after cardiac death, known as non-heart-beating donation.
The following tissues can be procured: bones, tendons, corneas, heart valves, femoral veins, great saphenous veins, small saphenous veins, pericardium, skin grafts, and the sclera (the tough, white outer coating surrounding the eye). These are only procured after death. (database only coding MAJOR ORGAN DONORS)
Organs that can be donated from living donors include part of the liver or pancreas and the kidney.
We are using time patient moved to the OR as discharge time rather than the time brain death is declared in the unit. This was decided when the database program began in the late 1980's because a number of organ donors did not leave ICU for 1-2 days after being declared brain dead and ICU wants to account for bed occupancy and nursing workload for those patients.
For more detailed information about the definition of ORGAN DONATION see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_donation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-heart_beating_donation
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