UNOS fast facts
Our mission
Unite and strengthen the donation and transplant community to save lives.
Our vision
A lifesaving transplant for everyone in need.
What we do
UNOS is a nonprofit organization with decades of experience in helping save lives through research, technology, innovation and education. The nonprofit’s portfolio encompasses donation and transplant and broader public health projects through its work:
- Developing new technologies and initiatives
- Conducting data-driven research and analysis
- Providing expert consulting services
- Advocating for patients
- Bringing communities together to save lives
The transplant system is working: Record increases in organ donation continue
The U.S. system for organ donation and recovery is among the best in the world. As a result of innovation and continuous improvement, more patients in need of organ transplant than ever have received the gift of life.
In 2023:
- More than 16,000 deceased organ donors, a new annual record and a continuation of a 13-year annual-record trend
- More than 46,000 organ transplants performed, continuing annual record-setting trend
- More than 10,000 transplant recipients were Black, non-Hispanic
- More than 10,000 liver transplants performed for the first time
- More than 3,000 lung transplants performed for the first time
- New annual records also set for kidney and heart transplants
But there is more that we can and must do to serve the thousands of patients still waiting for a lifesaving organ. UNOS continuously works with the organ donation and transplant community to drive improvement and make the transplant system as efficient and effective as possible to save more lives.
More about UNOS and the OPTN
The National Organ Transplant Act (NOTA) of 1984 called for an Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) to be created and run by a private, non-profit organization under federal contract. The federal Final Rule provides a regulatory framework for the structure and operation of the OPTN. According to these legislative and regulatory frameworks, the OPTN is charged with:
- Increasing and ensuring the effectiveness, efficiency and equity of organ sharing in the national system of organ allocation
- Increasing the supply of donated organs available for transplantation
UNOS was first awarded the national OPTN contract in 1986 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. UNOS continues as the only organization ever to serve under contract as the OPTN.
Working together: Our nation’s organ donation and transplant system
- The nation’s system functions as a public-private partnership. View a diagram of its structure
- The OPTN, HRSA and CMS have different roles. Learn about the roles
Read more
Our mission is to unite and strengthen the donation and transplant community to save lives.
Economic impact
UNOS has a significant and consistent economic impact on the people and businesses who call the city and the Greater Richmond Region home. Read the economic impact fact sheet
About UNOS
Read the UNOS at-a-glance fact sheet