New Michigan law protects health coverage for living organ donors

Malinda Herrera of Lansing donated part of her liver in August to help a colleague’s spouse.

Legislation should remove financial fears for those considering helping others

Gift of Life Michigan celebrates the passage of a law that prevents health insurers from denying or limiting coverage for living organ donors in this state.

Sen. Kevin Hertel sponsored the measure (SB 384), which passed both the Michigan House and Senate and was signed by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in November.

A person can work with a Michigan transplant center to donate a kidney or a portion of their liver to help someone waiting for a lifesaving transplant. The vast majority of organ transplants come from deceased organ donors, and that is facilitated by Gift of Life, the state’s organ and tissue donation program, along with those transplant centers.

Dorrie Dils, president and CEO of Gift of Life Michigan“Living donors are absolute heroes,” said Dorrie Dils, president and CEO of Gift of Life. “They deserve our protection and respect. We hope this legislation will remove the fear that insurance won’t cover costs for anyone considering becoming a living donor.”

The law specifically prohibits insurers from denying or limiting life, health or long-term care insurance because someone decides to be a living donor.

Más que 2,400 Michiganders are waiting for a life-saving organ and nearly 2,000 of them — 80% — need a kidney transplant. About 16,000 kidney patients are lingering on dialysis and would benefit from a kidney transplant.

Close to 200 people in Michigan are waiting for liver transplants. Malinda Herrera of Lansing donated part of her liver in August to help a colleague’s spouse. She worked with the transplant program at Medicina de Michigan in Ann Arbor. Herrera said her medical expenses were covered in full.

“The burden came from unpaid time off work,” Herrera said. “For me, it was a leap of faith, but it’s definitely something that had to be taken into consideration. It felt like such an amazing privilege to offer hope to another human.

“I could never have anticipated the fulfillment I would gain from being a living donor.”

In addition to this new law, the state announced on Nov. 1 that all state employees — more than 50,000 — can now receive up to 60 days of paid time off for living donation, but that policy doesn’t cover all Michiganders.

“Those who choose to donate a part of themselves to improve the health of a fellow Michigander represent the best of us,” Gov. Whitmer said. “I’m proud that we are taking action to make sure they can take the time they need for the procedure without sacrificing their paycheck.”

Read more in the LifeLINES newsletter

Leer más publicaciones
Marge Del Greco, two-time liver transplant recipient and Legacy Award recipient

2025 Champions Gala

Congratulations to the 18 people and organizations we will recognize at Gift of Life Michigan’s…

Lee mas
Tom Brock received a heart transplant in 1989.

Transplant Throwback: Tom Brock

Name: Tom Brock Age: 65  Home: Hartland Transplant: Heart Why did you need a transplant…

Lee mas
Sarah Jelsomeno holds up her Donate Life license plate

Donate Life license plates drive awareness

Readers share their messages  The back bumpers of thousands of vehicles across the state sport…

Lee mas
Man in scrubs in OR

Facts about tissue donation

Donors give life, sight and mobility to thousands  Q: Can anyone be a tissue donor?…

Lee mas
Image of a brain that is green on left (on green background) and blue on right (on blue background)

Facts about brain death and how it’s determined

The organ donation process is carefully regulated for patient safety and conducted with the utmost…

Lee mas
Carla Mendoza Bussell received a double lung transplant, allowing the mother of four to finish raising her kids and meet her grandchildren.

Gift of Life launches annual appeal for financial giving

Gifts pay for efforts to grow the Donor Registry  Gift of Life’s annual fundraising appeal…

Lee mas
Vuelve al comienzo