Myth debunked by fact: Doctors work to save your life if you’re a registered organ donor

Emilio DeFoe in the hospital, before he donated his organs

A terrified Terra DeFoe waited and watched as physicians and nurses at University of Michigan Health in Ann Arbor frantically worked to save her young son, Emilio. 

Emilio DeFoe was a registered organ donor who saved several lives.He was a registered organ donor — a detail none of the doctors or nurses knew as they treated him before performing a 10-hour heart surgery to attempt to save the 24-year-old. 

The fact is, they didn’t need or want to know. Saving his life was their job, and they gave it everything they had. 

Terra says the pervasive myth that doctors won’t work as hard to save the lives of registered organ donors is simply untrue. In her family’s case, Emilio was fighting to live, and the ER team battled just as hard to help Emilio see his future. 

“If you think doctors won’t work to save your life just because you signed up to be an organ donor, please come and talk to me,” Terra said. “I was there with my son. I saw the doctors resuscitate my child several times. They had one goal: They wanted to save Emilio.” 

Emilio didn’t make it, but not because his care team didn’t try. And certainly not because he was signed up to be an organ donor. 

Doctors, nurses and other medical experts hustling to treat patients in emergency departments across the country are usually unaware of the donation status of those in their care. 

Terra DeFoe's son, Emilio, was an organ and tissue donor at the end of his lifeThey also have a moral and legal obligation to save lives. 

“I take offense when people say they won’t save your life,” Terra said in a video aimed at helping dispel the pervasive myth. “They took an oath to save your life. It has to stop because too many people are losing their lives because of this one simple myth.” 

Like most myths, this one has been passed down through many generations and across most cultures. It’s so persistent that even the fact-finding website snopes.com has addressed it as untrue. 

Emilio joined the Donor Registry at 18 — six years before he died. 

“Emilio made a decision that he wanted to make sure that what he leaves behind is able to change the quality of life for someone else,” she said. 


Facts about donation 

Donor Network of Arizona, an organ procurement organization like Gift of Life Michigan, lists several compelling reasons on its website about why doctors work to save all lives. They include: 

  • Physicians are bound by the Hippocratic Oath, one of the oldest binding documents in history. It says, in part, “I will remember that I remain a member of society, with special obligations to all my fellow human beings.” 
  • The emergency room process is so frantic, doctors and nurses don’t have time to check a patient’s name, let alone their donor status. They work quickly to stabilize the patient. 
  • Trauma doctors are separate from transplant teams. By law, the medical team treating the patient is separate from the transplant team. 

The myth is also addressed by Mayo Clinic. The Rochester, Minnesota, medical center is among the most respected in the country. 

For more information offered by Mayo, go to: golm.org/mayo-mythbusting 

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