Phoebe Earns National Recognition For Promoting Organ, Eye and Tissue Donation

0Comments

Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital earned national recognition for its efforts to increase organ, eye and tissue donor registrations across the state through the Workplace Partnership for Life (WPFL) Hospital Organ Donation Campaign. The WPFL is a national initiative that unites the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and the organ donation community with workplaces across the nation in spreading the word about the importance of donation.

The WPFL Hospital Organ Donation Campaign challenges hospitals and healthcare organizations to “let life bloom” by educating their staff, patients, visitors and communities about the critical need for organ, eye and tissue donation, including offering opportunities to register as organ donors. PPMH earned platinum recognition – the highest possible level – for conducting awareness and registry activities between October 2021 and April 2022, even as they continued to respond to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Phoebe worked with LifeLink® of Georgia, the local organ and tissue recovery organization, as well as Donate Life Georgia, the state organ and tissue donor registry, to leverage its outreach efforts. During the 2021-2022 campaign cycle, Phoebe was one of 87 participating hospital partners within the LifeLink® service area and one of 1,333 organizations across the nation to participate in the 2022 campaign that helped to add a collective 50,850 new donors to state registries. This campaign has generated over 630,000 registrations since its inception in 2011 and unites donation advocates at hospitals with representatives from their local organ recovery organizations.

“I am extremely proud of our team that has made organ donation a priority at Phoebe. Their commitment and compassion have saved lives,” said Scott Steiner, Phoebe Putney Health System President and CEO. “Earlier this year, Lifelink of Georgia and the Georgia Hospital Association presented the Barbara and John Ware Donate Life Hospital Award to Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital, acknowledging the Phoebe Family’s coordinated efforts to increase organ donation and support patients and families who make the selfless decision to donate.  This platinum level national recognition is further evidence of our team’s ongoing work to educate our community about this important issue,” Steiner added. 

Currently, there are 3,600 people waiting for a lifesaving organ transplant in Georgia. Everyone, regardless of their age or health can make their decision to become a registered organ and tissue donor when obtaining a driver license/state identification card through the Georgia Department of Driver Services, when purchasing a hunting/fishing license through the Department of Natural Resources or online at www.DonateLifeGeorgia.org. For more information about the WPFL Hospital Organ Donation Campaign, visit www.organdonor.gov/hospitals.

Original source can be found here.

 



Related

Scott Dutton, Assistant Director of Georgia Bureau of Investigation

135 registered sex offenders live in Tift County as of week ending April 25

There were 135 registered sex offenders living in Tift County as of the week ending April 25, according to the Georgia Sex Offender Registry.

Scott Dutton, Assistant Director of Georgia Bureau of Investigation

Q1: Number of registered sex offenders living in Tift County unchanged as of Q1

There was no change in the number of registered sex offenders living in Tift County as of the first quarter of 2026 from the previous quarter, according to the Georgia Sex Offender Registry.

Chris Hosey, Director of Georgia Bureau of Investigation

April 25: 365 registered sex offenders living in Dougherty County

The Georgia Sex Offender Registry shows 365 registered sex offenders were living in Dougherty County as of the week ending April 25.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Albany Standard.