Quantcast
Latest Stories

Facebook to promote organ donations


AFP FILE PHOTO

WASHINGTON — Facebook on Tuesday unveiled an initiative to use the vast social network to connect organ donors with people who need life-saving transplants.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg made the announcement and became one of the first Facebook users to sign up on the social network to be an organ donor.

Members of Facebook in the United States and Britain can now indicate that they are organ donors on their timelines, and if they are not donors, they can find links to official organ donation registries and instantly enroll.

“Facebook is really about communicating and telling stories,” Zuckerberg told ABC News.

“We think that people can really help spread awareness of organ donation and that they want to participate in this to their friends. And that can be a big part of helping solve the crisis that’s out there.”

Zuckerberg said he was motivated to launch the program by conversations with his girlfriend, who is a medical student, and his friendship with Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, whose life was extended by a liver transplant.

“We want to make it simple,” said Zuckerberg. “You just put in the state or country that you’re from, so that we can help link you to the official registries.”

In the “health and wellness” section of users’ timelines, users can list their status as organ donors and explain the decision to their friends, in an effort to raise awareness about the need for donors.

“Today, more than 114,000 people in the United States, and millions more around the globe, are waiting for the heart, kidney or liver transplant that will save their lives,” Zuckerberg said in a statement with Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg.

An estimated 18 people die every day from the lack of available organs, according to Donate Life America, a nonprofit alliance that is partnering with Facebook.

“We can’t thank Facebook enough for the organization’s commitment to helping save lives by encouraging Americans to register as organ, eye and tissue donors… Thousands of lives will be saved or healed as a result of this initiative,” said David Fleming, president and chief executive of Donate Life America.

“We want to encourage every Facebook user to take a moment and update their timeline, register to be a donor, and share their decision with family and friends. It is a simple way to provide hope for those in need.”

Zuckerberg, 27, who is known for avoiding the public limelight, disclosed some details of his personal life in the ABC interview, describing his chats with girlfriend Priscilla Chan that helped lead to the donation initiative.

“She’s in medical school now,” Zuckerberg said of Chan. “She’s going to be a pediatrician, so our dinner conversations are often about Facebook and the kids that she’s meeting.”

He told ABC that Chan told him about patients she meets “getting sicker as they don’t have the organ that they need” and other fortunate cases where children ultimately received transplants. Zuckerberg called the accounts “unbelievable.”

Describing one case of a boy needing a heart transplant, Chan told Zuckerberg the boy’s skin had turned blue from lack of oxygen, but within weeks of receiving a transplant he was out again playing sports.

“How can that not make you happy?” he said.

Zuckerberg also said the death of Jobs, whom he called a “friend,” helped inspire the project.

“That definitely, I think, was something that we all had in mind as we were building this out,” Zuckerberg said. “His story is just one of many, of people who both were able to have an organ transplant that made his life longer and he was extremely thankful for that.”

Jobs died on October 5 of pancreatic cancer at the age of 56. But his life was extended by a liver transplant in 2009 that enabled him to return to the helm of Apple.

The number of people using Facebook had risen to 901 million by the end of the quarter, according to company documents.

Facebook is expected to make its much-anticipated stock market debut in the coming weeks in a public offering which could raise as much as $10 billion, the largest flotation ever by an Internet company on Wall Street.

Zuckerberg declined to comment on the IPO plans due to securities rules, but the Dow Jones website All Things Digital reported that Facebook expects to get approval this week to distribute its prospectus, which would move the process closer to launching.

Follow us on Facebook Follow on Twitter Follow on Twitter




Recent Stories:

Second time’s the charm for Miss PH-Earth 2013 20 mins elapsed Manila, Taipei agree on ‘cooperative’ probe 2 hours elapsed Asian shares higher on US gains 3 hours elapsed Metro’s traffic situation may now be monitored via smart phones, tablets 3 hours elapsed Woman shot dead inside restaurant in Parañaque City 4 hours elapsed PH approves three new wind farms 5 hours elapsed Comelec suspends partylist canvassing 6 hours elapsed Saudi signs accord to protect PH maids 6 hours elapsed
Complete stories on our Digital Edition newsstand for tablets, netbooks and mobile phones; 14-issue free trial. About to step out? Get breaking alerts on your mobile.phone. Text ON INQ BREAKING to 4467, for Globe, Smart and Sun subscribers in the Philippines.

Tags: Facebook , Health , Internet , IT , Organ Transplant , Transplant

  • http://www.facebook.com/recella.e.nestor Recella Erida Nestor

    this may help the people who are in need of transplants but the problem is the abuse among innocent people as donors of the organ who will volunteer theirselves for a cause especially those who are living in a third world country i.e. Philippines, this must be possible but it has to be regulated in a way that illegal recruiters for organ donors may not abuse the said issue as well as the innocence of the less fortunate people to sell their human body parts without knowing the harmful effects it may bring to their health eventually after donation in return of money.



Copyright © 2013,
.
To subscribe to the Philippine Daily Inquirer newspaper in the Philippines, call +63 2 896-6000 for Metro Manila and Metro Cebu or email your subscription request here.
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:
c/o Philippine Daily Inquirer Chino Roces Avenue corner Yague and Mascardo Streets, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines Or fax nos. +63 2 8974793 to 94
Advertisement

News

  • Buhay, A Teacher, Bayan Muna lead party-list race
  • PPCRV looks into delays in sending poll results
  • What Went Before: Past Charter-change attempts
  • Brillantes defends use of grouped canvass reports
  • DepEd plans to send more students to private schools
  • Sports

  • Aces not one and done, says Uytengsu
  • What a class act by Alaska
  • Caluag rules Asian BMX Elite category
  • Emperado claims 2nd GM victim, shares lead
  • Fruitas, Boracay seek semis berths Tuesday
  • Lifestyle

  • Second time’s the charm for Miss PH-Earth 2013
  • These dogs can fly– and that includes asPins, too
  • Hair: It doesn’t only reflect your beauty, it also says something about your health
  • Learn ‘the ropes’ to get in shape
  • Can the ability to bilocate be inherited?
  • Entertainment

  • Single Review: ‘Up In The Air’ by 30 Seconds To Mars
  • Arnel Pineda: Journey to go on a hiatus after 2016
  • Heard: Sir Chief on being ‘Papa-ble!’
  • Double victory for Yllanas
  • K-pop’s G Dragon eager for challenge of solo tour
  • Business

  • Asian shares higher on US gains
  • PH approves three new wind farms
  • BIR exceeds April collection target
  • Barclays ups PH growth estimates
  • PH registered BOP surplus of $274M in April
  • Technology

  • Metro’s traffic situation may now be monitored via smart phones, tablets
  • Yahoo! to buy blog-maker Tumblr for $1.1B—report
  • Free Inquirer tablets for lucky INQSnap readers
  • Hong Kong launches first electric taxis
  • DepEd website now up and normal
  • Opinion

  • Editorial cartoon, May 21, 2013
  • Reliance on remittances
  • Shattered bamboo reeds
  • Ideal worlds
  • The sheer inadequacy of single-factor analyses
  • Global Nation

  • Manila, Taipei agree on ‘cooperative’ probe
  • Saudi signs accord to protect PH maids
  • Binay urges Taiwan to protect Filipino workers
  • MECO representative in Taiwan asked to explain ‘joint probe’ commitment
  • DOJ chief slams Taiwan ‘murder’ claim
  • Marketplace
    Advertisement
    © Copyright 1997-2013 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved