Colorado Code § 13-22-104

Transplants and transfusions generally - declaration of policy - limit on liability of minors
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(1) The availability of scientific knowledge, skills, and materials for the
transplantation, injection, transfusion, or transfer of human tissue, organs, blood, or components
thereof is important to the health and welfare of the people of this state. Equally important is the
duty of those performing such service or providing such materials to exercise due care under the
attending circumstances to the end that those receiving health care will benefit and adverse
results therefrom will be minimized by the use of available and proven scientific safeguards. The
imposition of legal liability without fault upon the persons and organizations engaged in such
scientific procedures may inhibit the exercise of sound medical judgment and restrict the
availability of important scientific knowledge, skills, and materials. It is, therefore, the public
policy of this state to promote the health and welfare of the people by emphasizing the
importance of exercising due care, and by limiting the legal liability arising out of such scientific
procedures to instances of negligence or willful misconduct.
(2) The donation, whether for or without valuable consideration, the acquisition,
preparation, transplantation, injection, or transfusion of any human tissue, organ, blood, or
component thereof for or to a human being is the performance of a medical service and does not,
in any way, constitute a sale. No physician, surgeon, hospital, blood bank, tissue bank, or other
person or entity who donates, obtains, prepares, transplants, injects, transfuses, or otherwise
transfers, or who assists or participates in donating, obtaining, preparing, transplanting, injecting,
transfusing, or transferring any tissue, organ, blood, or component thereof from one or more
human beings, living or dead, to another living human being for the purpose of therapy or
transplantation needed by him for his health or welfare shall be liable for any damages of any
kind or description directly or indirectly caused by or resulting from any such activity; except
that each such person or entity remains liable for his or its own negligence or willful misconduct.
(3) Any provision of the law to the contrary notwithstanding, any minor who has reached
the age of eighteen years may give consent to the donation of his or her blood, organs, or tissue
and to the penetration of tissue which is necessary to accomplish such donation. Such consent
shall not be subject to disaffirmance because of minority. The consent of the parent, parents, or
legal guardian of such a minor shall not be necessary in order to authorize such donation of
blood, organs, or tissue and penetration of tissue.
(4) Any provision of the law to the contrary notwithstanding, a minor who is at least
sixteen years of age but is less than eighteen years of age may give consent to the donation of his
or her blood and to the penetration of tissue that is necessary to accomplish the donation, so long
as the minor's parent or legal guardian consents to authorize the donation of the minor's blood
and the penetration of tissue. A minor's consent shall not be subject to disaffirmance because of
minority.

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