How are organs extracted and donated?
More than half a million Australians give blood. Some 540 donate breast milk. In both cases,the body replenishes supplies. Organ donations are,of course,a one-time event. Some 35 per cent of Australians – about 8 million people – have agreed to become organ donors,with 147,969 signing up in 2025,15 per cent lower than in 2024. Australia’s donor rate per million population is 20.2,below the national target of 25.
Globally,Australia ranked21st for donation from deceased organ donors in 2024. Spain’s rate of donors per million population is 53.95,making it thegold standard. Its citizens are presumed to consent to organ donation,although families must also agree.
A big pool of potential donors helps to offset the narrow circumstances in which a major organ transplant is feasible:donors need to die in an intensive care unit or emergency department,where they will be on a ventilator. That adds up to about 1670 people of the 89,000 people who died in Australian hospitals in 2025,or 2 per cent.
Donation can happen in two different ways,says Opdam,an associate professor who is based at the Austin Hospital in Melbourne. “The most common is brain death donation that occurs when a person is declared legally dead by irreversible brain function loss,with organs recovered while on artificial support. So,yes,the person is on a ventilator with a beating heart when the organ-donation operation begins. Donation after circulatory death occurs when life support is withdrawn and death is declared after the heart stops,with fast organ recovery crucial.”
When someone is dying in ICU,and their organs might be suitable for donation,organ donation specialists (typically,nurses who work with DonateLife) will check whether the patient has registered as a donor and will seek formal consent from their family. They will request personal health information,such as lifestyle choices that could provide insights into any risk of transmissible diseases or infection.
‘We don’t actually proceed with donation in Australia unless it’s fairly certain that there’ll be an organ transplanted.’
Intensive care specialist Helen Opdam
In 2025,of 1500 families who were approached,790 agreed to donate,which lines up with a national consent rate of 53 per cent. DonateLife says that when a patient is registered for donation,about eight in 10 families agree to go ahead;the number halves if they don’t know whether their family members wanted to be a donor. Families might say no because they think their loved one has been through enough,Opdam tells us,or they don’t like the idea of it,or because of cultural and religious practices,although she says among the major religions “the gift of life to another person would take priority over burying the person whole or keeping the body intact”.
Meanwhile,donation specialists and hospital transplant teams check wait lists for a potential match. The heart,lungs,liver and pancreas are matched by blood group,organ size,level of need and geographical location while kidneys are matched by blood group and tissue compatibility. The recipient is summoned to hospital to prepare for surgery. “We don’t actually proceed with donation in Australia unless it’s fairly certain that there’ll be an organ transplanted,” Opdam says.
Once extracted,the organs are flushed with special fluid to clear them of blood,bagged carefully and transported in an Esky-type container with ice to a transplant hospital,fast. The heart can stay out of the body for between four and six hours,and the liver needs to be transplanted within eight to 12 hours,although the kidneys survive up to 24 hours without deteriorating. Machine perfusion devices can extend these time periods,but not for days.
Fine art photographer Ralph Kerle can see thanks to a corneal transplant he had 40 years ago.Simon SchluterEyes and other tissues – heart valves,bone,tendons,ligaments,skin – are not as susceptible to damage from loss of blood flow so can be removed some time after the heart and circulation has stopped,including from people who have died outside a hospital,Opdam says. In 2025,1677 Australians donated their eyes after death;332 donated their tissues,ranging from heart valves to skin to bone marrow. These lower-profile donations do everything from restore sight to help reconstruct bones and repair burns. When the White Island volcano erupted in New Zealand in 2019,the Victorian Tissue Bank and the Organ and Tissue donation service in Sydney eachsent 10,000 square centimetres of donor skin to help burn victims.
‘I’m always extraordinarily grateful that someone gave part of themselves to me. They live in me.’
Cornea recipient Ralph Kerle
One of Australia’s oldest living corneal transplant recipients,fine art photographer Ralph Kerle,has keratoconus,when the cells in the eye’s surface disintegrate and the cornea,the transparent top layer,instead of being spherical becomes pointed. Forty years ago,he began to slowly lose his sight,then blindness set in when his hard contact lenses scarred the surface of his eye.
In 1983,Kerle had a corneal transplant in his right eye. “There was a call to say that,‘You will be admitted to hospital tomorrow,and we’re going to operate.’” When he woke up post-op and saw a clock on the wall,it felt like a miracle. “The transplant is 44 years old,and the patient was in his 60s,so I see the world through the eye of a 110-year-old person.”
Cornea recipient Ralph Kerle with a camera and the spectacles he uses to supplement his eyesight.Simon SchluterStrictly speaking,it’s only the cornea that is donated,so the rest of the eye is Ralph’s – “It’s like a skin graft,in a way,” he explains – and given all the body’s cells turn over,there’d be none that were there on the day of transplant. In any case,the keratoconus in Kerle’s left eye has stabilised and,without a specialised “contact” lens,he’s got 20 per cent vision. In the “new” eye,he’s got 60 per cent vision,which he boosts with a contact lens and reading glasses. Kerle plans to donate his organs when he dies. “I’m always extraordinarily grateful that someone gave part of themselves to me,” he says. “They live in me.”
‘You get the organ because you’re the best match,you’re the sickest person,you’ve been waiting the longest time.’
Intensive care specialist Helen Opdam
Organ donation is a system that relies on community trust:prospective donors must believe that medical staff will always try to save their lives,that they will be treated with dignity during death and donation,and recipients will be chosen based on need,rather than wealth or connections. Opdam says if you need a transplant in Australia,you have a very reasonable chance of receiving one. “And you can’t say that for all parts of the world. You don’t get the organ because you’re an educated white man at all. You get the organ because you’re the best match,you’re the sickest person,you’ve been waiting the longest time.”
Brendan Ryland took his name off the waiting list for a heart transplant. But events took another turn.Dominic LorrimerHow does it feel to have a change of heart?
Brendan Ryland was terrified at the prospect of receiving a heart transplant. He was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy,a disease of the heart muscle,when he was just six weeks old,but his health rapidly improved when he was three and stayed that way – until he was 19. “They found two blood clots in my lungs,and a blood clot the size of a golf ball in my heart,” he says.The cardiomyopathy had returned. Doctors said Ryland would probably need a transplant at some stage.
He returned to university and sport (although instead of AFL,he played touch footy). He asked to be removed from the transplant list. He didn’t want a new heart – and any call from a random number after 5pm sent him into a panic. “I was petrified that I had to go do this thing. I was terrified,” he recalls.
‘I was turning over in my head,is the risk and reward worth it?’
Heart recipient Brendan Ryland
Why was that? “I don’t know 100 per cent,to be honest,other than I was doing really well physically. And when I was three years old,I turned a corner,so in the back of my mind,I thought I could do it again. And I was turning over in my head,is the risk and reward worth it? You read this stuff about getting a transplant,and it’s the worst-case scenario,people not making it,and all these medications are going to make you sick.”
Organ transplant survival rates vary:70 per cent of heart and lung recipients are still alive five years on,87 per cent of liver recipients,92 per cent for intestine recipients,and 94.3 of those with a new pancreas. (A study of the world’s first 50 face transplants showed 85 per cent of recipients were alive five years later).
In any case,when he was 26,Ryland had a heart attack. “That was when I knew the reality of the situation,” he says. “There was no other road but a transplant to make me live a longer life. So then it wasn’t fear any more because I accepted my fate.”
It took a year before he got the call at 9.46 on a Saturday morning in 2015. A kind-sounding woman said the hospital had a heart waiting for him. Ryland’s loved ones gathered around him:five friends and his mother,who flew to Sydney from Bright in country Victoria.
Heart recipient Brendan Ryland:“I got emotional at the start[of a race] thinking how lucky I was to do it.”Dominic LorrimerThe days after the transplant now seem like snapshots in time. “I don’t remember long periods of time,but I just remember little moments. I remember my family coming in and cousins coming in,and I remember asking for a can of Coke. That’s all I wanted,” he says.
But Ryland’s transplant journey wasn’t over. His original heart was enlarged by disease;his new heart was much smaller and the sac surrounding it filled with fluid,which took an operation to drain. Ryland ended up in hospital for four weeks,and a further two weeks in temporary housing as he adapted to life as a heart transplant recipient. “I was,essentially,changing one chronic illness for another. It still just took a little bit to get used to,” he says.
He’s in good health now,thanks to a regime of medication and lots of exercise,including 20-kilometre trail runs,and he thinks about his donor – a man with a young family – every day,especially when he works out. “The race the other morning,I got emotional at the start thinking how lucky I was to do it,” he says.
‘I guess I still think it’s his. Maybe I’m a custodian of it,and it’s there helping me.’
Brendan Ryland
Before his transplant,Ryland was told that most organ recipients do not contact their donor or donor family. “I was just so blown away. How can you not have reached out to your donor?” In the end,it took him 10 years to write the letter. “I remember three months after[the transplant],I started writing this massive note to them. But in the back of my mind,I was like,well,all of this has to be anonymous,so this can’t go.
“And so then I kept doing drafts and going back to it,and I think the situation was so big that it became a little bit more overwhelming than it needed to be. So it was the 10-year anniversary that spurred me to do something. I just wrote a much more simple version,saying thank you and I really appreciate it,a quick update of who I was and what I was doing with my life post the transplant.” The donor’s family wrote back straight away.
So,does Ryland think of the heart as his own,his donor’s,or a bit of both? “I guess I still think it’s his. Maybe I’m a custodian of it,and it’s there helping me.”
There were 125 heart transplants in Australia in 2025.Getty ImagesHow does it feel to donate a loved one’s organs?
Kerri Daw knows what it’s like to see a loved one wait for an organ transplant – then end up donating their other healthy organs. Daw’s daughter Laura is among the small number of people who became a recipient and donor at the same time.
Laura Benham was a teacher and mother of two in the Victorian town of Swan Hill when she developed a cough that was eventually diagnosed as idiopathic interstitial lung disease with pulmonary fibrosis. (The latter condition has been in the news recently in reports about Norway’s Princess Mette-Marit who,at 52,is likely to need a lung transplant.)
‘Why can’t we share them with someone else who’s going to get a better life out of it and has been suffering for many years?’
Kerri Daw,whose daughter Laura donated her liver and kidneys after she died following a lung transplant
After 13 months on a waiting list,Laura received a call from the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne alerting her that lungs had become available. “She was very positive,very calm,” Daw recalls. The left lung went in,and the right,then things went downhill. Laura,aged 41,suffered a stroke and was declared brain dead. “When we spoke with the doctors,they couldn’t say exactly what it was,” says Daw,who calls it a “freak” occurrence.
Despite their shock and grief,Laura’s family told doctors they wanted to follow Laura’s wishes to become an organ donor,and her kidneys and liver went to people on the waiting list. “As a family,the organs are no good to us,” Daw says. “Why can’t we share them with someone else who’s going to get a better life out of it and has been suffering for many years?”
The standard way to sign up as an organ donor in Australia is to fill in a form,albeit very brief,on the DonateLife government website. Daw believes Australia should bring back the system of printing someone’s organ-donation wishes on their drivers’ licence,as is done in South Australia,where 74 per cent of residents are registered as organ donors,the highest level in the country. Says Daw:“Say there’s a car accident or something,by the time they discover that you’re a donor,maybe your organs have to have deteriorated. So if it’s on the licence,they can say,‘You’re a donor,let’s get it started.’”
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