Edmonton Journal

Almost 100,000 registered to donate organs after Humboldt

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Nearly 100,000 Canadians signed up to become organ donors after learning a victim of last month’s Humboldt Broncos bus crash had signed a donor card just weeks before the crash — and wound up saving six lives.

According to Canadian Blood Services there were 99,742 registrati­ons in April alone, and that number only includes provinces that have online registrati­on: British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and Prince Edward Island.

Jenny Ryan, a spokespers­on for Canadian Blood Services, called it an “extraordin­ary show of support for organ and tissue donation,” and said the tragedy inspired people to be more aware.

She noted that the spike in organ donation registrati­ons also occurred during a week in April that’s dedicated to national organ and tissue donation awareness.

Logan Boulet signed a donor card after his 21st birthday, several weeks before the bus carrying him and the rest of the Humboldt Broncos hockey team collided with a tractor-trailer unit in rural Saskatchew­an. He was among the 16 people killed in the crash.

In Ontario, there are typically 42 online organ donation registrati­ons a day, but since the tragedy that number has jumped to almost 800 registrati­ons per day, said Ronnie Gavsie, president of Ontario’s organ and tissue donation agency, Trillium Gift of Life.

The bus crash “jolted” Canadians into registerin­g as donors, Gavsie said in an interview.

“We can only measure online, but it just jolted people out of their complacenc­y and they registered consent and that will translate into thousands of lives saved, not today, but eventually.”

In a recent appearance before the House of Commons health committee, Gavsie recommende­d that the federal government initiate a national public education campaign on TV and radio.

“The sad thing is the numbers aren’t sustained. Are we going to wait for a tragedy? I don’t want to wait for a tragedy, I think we need to have it hard-hitting in the media,” she said later.

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