Honor walk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An honor walk (or hero walk) is a ceremonial event to commemorate a patient whose organs are donated. The event normally takes place as the patient is transported to an operating room or waiting ambulance prior to organ procurement. It is typically held for patients on life support with no chance of survival, but can also be held for living donors.[1]

Smiling man and woman walk through a hospital as onlookers applaud
An honor walk held for a living liver donor in Bengaluru, India

As of 2022, over 100,000 people are on the national organ transplant waiting list in the United States, with 17 people dying per day waiting for a transplant. An individual donor can provide up to eight organs.[2]

The ceremony began in part because nurses working in American intensive care units wanted to honor their patients who had died and donated their organs.[3]

Procedure

As the patient is transported to the operating room or a waiting ambulance,[4] the hallways are lined with hospital staff and the patient's friends and family.[3] The event is intended to show appreciation and respect for the patient's decision to donate their organs and may include an honor guard in the case of a veteran.[3][5]

Media

COVID-19 pandemic

References

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