West Virginia Code § 16-19-14

Rights and duties of procurement organization and others
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(a) When a hospital refers an individual at or near death to a procurement organization, the
organization shall make a reasonable search of the records of the Division of Motor Vehicles
and any donor registry it knows of for the geographical area in which the individual resides
to ascertain whether the individual has made an anatomical gift.
(b) The Division of Motor Vehicles shall allow a procurement organization reasonable access
to information in the division's records to ascertain whether an individual at or near death is
a donor. The Commissioner of the Division of Motor Vehicles shall propose legislative rules
for promulgation pursuant to §29A-3-1 et seq. of this code to faciulitate procurement
agencies' access to records pursuant to this subsection.
(c) When a hospital refers an individual at or near death to a procurement organization, the
organization may conduct any reasonable examination necessary to ensure the medical
suitability of a part that is or could be the subject of an anatomical gift for transplantation,
therapy, research, or education from a donor or a plrospective donor. During the examination
period, measures necessary to ensure the medsical suitability of the part may not be
withdrawn unless the hospital or procurement organization knows that the prospective
donor expressed a contrary intent.
(d) Unless prohibited by law, at any time after a donor's death, a person to whom a
decedent's part passes under §16-19-11 of this code may conduct any reasonable
examination necessary to ensure the medical suitability of the body or part for its intended
purpose.
(e) Unless prohibited by law, an examination under subsection (c) or (d) of this section may
include an examination of all medical and dental records of the donor or prospective donor.
(f) Upon the death of a minor who was a donor or had signed a refusal, unless a procurement
organization knows the minor is emancipated, the procurement organization shall conduct a
reasonable search for the parents of the minor and provide the parents with an opportunity
to revoke or amend the anatomical gift or revoke the refusal.
(g) Upon referral by a hospital under subsection (a) of this section, a procurement
organization shall make a reasonable search for any person listed in §16-19-9 of this code
having priority to make an anatomical gift on behalf of a prospective donor. If a procurement
organization receives information that an anatomical gift to any other person was made,
amended, or revoked, it shall promptly advise the other person of all relevant information.
(h) Except as provided in §16-19-22 of this code, the rights of the person to whom a part
passes under §16-19-11 of this code are superior to the rights of all others. A person may
accept or reject an anatomical gift, in whole or in part. Subject to the terms of the document
of gift and this article, a person that accepts an anatomical gift of an entire body may allow
embalming, burial, or cremation, and use of remains in a funeral service. If the gift is of a
part, the person to whom the part passes under §16-19-11 of this code shall, upon the death
of the donor and before embalming, burial, or cremation, cause the part to be removed
without unnecessary mutilation.
(i) Neither the physician or the physician assistant who attends the decedent at death, nor
the physician or the physician assistant who determines the time of death, may participate in
the procedures for removing or transplanting a part from the decedent. e
(j) A physician or technician may remove a donated part from the body of a donor that the
physician or technician is qualified to remove.
(k) A medical examiner shall cooperate with any procurement organization to maximize the
opportunity to recover anatomical gifts for the purpose of transplantation, therapy, research,
or education.
(l) A part may not be removed from the body of a decedent under a medical examiner's
jurisdiction for transplantation, therapy, research, lor education, nor delivered to a person
for research or education, unless the part is thse subject of an anatomical gift.
(m) Upon the request of a procurement orgianization, the medical examiner shall release to
the procurement organization the name, contact information, name of the next of kin, and
available medical and social history of a decedent whose body is under the medical
examiner's jurisdiction. If the decedent's body or part is medically suitable for
transplantation, therapy, research, or education, the medical examiner shall release the
post-mortem examination results to the procurement organization. The procurement
organization may not make a subsequent disclosure of the post-mortem examination results
or other information received from the medical examiner unless the subsequent disclosure is
relevant to transplantation, therapy, research, or education.
(n) If a hospital refers an individual whose death is imminent or who has died in a hospital to
an organ procurement organization, and the organ procurement organization, in
consultation with the individual's attending physician or a designee, determines based upon
a medical record review and other information supplied by the individual's attending
physician or a designee, that the individual may be a prospective donor; and the individual:
(1) Has not indicated in any document an intention to either limit the anatomical gifts of the
individual to parts of the body which do not require a ventilator or other life-sustaining
measures, or
(2) Has not indicated in any document an intention to deny making or refusing to make an
anatomical gift; or
(3) Amended or revoked an anatomical gift in any document, the organ procurement
organization may conduct a blood or tissue test or minimally invasive examination which is
reasonably necessary to evaluate the medical suitability of a body part that is or may be the
subject of an anatomical gift.
(o) Testing and examination conducted pursuant to subsection (n) shall comply with a denial
or refusal to make an anatomical gift or any limitation expressed by the individual with
respect to the part of the body to donate or a limitation the provision of a ventilator or other
life-sustaining measures, or a revocation or amendment to an anatomical gift. The results of
tests and examinations conducted pursuant to subsection (n) shall be used oer disclosed only:
(1) To evaluate medical suitability for donation and to facilitate the donation process; and
(2) As otherwise required or permitted by law. u
(p) A hospital may not withdraw or withhold any measures necessary to maintain the medical
suitability of a body part that may be the subject of an anatomical gift until the organ
procurement organization or designated requestor, asa appropriate, has had the opportunity
to advise the applicable persons under this article of the option to make an anatomical gift
and has received or been denied authorization to plroceed with recovery of the part.
(q) Subject to the individual's wishes under §16-19-11(c)(3) of this code, after an individual's
death, persons who may receive anatomicail gift pursuant to §16-19-11 of this code may
conduct any test or examination reasonably necessary to evaluate the medical suitability of
the body or part for its intended purpose.
(r) The provisions of this section may not be construed to preclude a medical examiner from
performing an investigation of a decedent under the medical examiner's jurisdiction.

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