As part of the Administrations efforts, for the first time in the programs nearly 40-year history, HRSA has awarded separate contracts to reform the organ procurement and transplant network. Multiple vendors will support improving quality and patient safety, modernizing IT, bolstering communications with patients, and more
Today, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) at the Department of Health and Hunan Services (HHS) announced the first ever multi-vendor contract awards to modernize the nations organ transplant system to improve transparency, performance, governance, and efficiency of the organ donation and transplantation system for the more than 100,000 people on the organ transplant waitlist.
The Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) has long faced critiques about lack of transparency, potential for conflicts of interest, IT reliability issues and other structural challenges. As part of the Administrations transformation of the OPTN, for the first time in 40 years, multiple contractors will provide their expertise and proven experience to improve the national organ transplant system. This transition from a single vendor to multiple vendors to support OPTN operations is a critical step in advancing innovation in the transplant system to better serve patients and their families and implements the bipartisan Securing the U.S. Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network Act signed by the President in September 2023.
With the life of more than 100,000 Americans at stake, no organ donated for transplantation should go to waste, said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.For too long, our organ transplant system has fallen short, mired in monopoly.The Biden-Harris Administration has reformed OPTN to require accountability in the operation of organ procurement that our transplant patients and their families demand.
One person is added to the waitlist every 10 minutes. Each one relies on and deserves the best care possible, said HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson. Todays action marks a significant advancement in the Biden-Harris Administrations commitment to doing what it takes to make sure the nations organ matching system works for patients, donors, and the families who depend on the OPTN for that life-saving call.
HRSA is announcing multiple OPTN modernization awards to support critical actions, including:
In August 2024, HRSA announced that the OPTN Board of Directorsthe governing board that develops national organ allocation policyis now separately incorporated and independent from the Board of longtime OPTN contractor, the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS). HRSA awarded an OPTN Board Support contract to a new vendor, American Institutes for Research, to support the newly incorporated OPTN Board of Directors.
HRSA launched the OPTN Modernization Initiative in March 2023, including making proposals to reform the decades old OPTN statute and increase funding for the program to better serve patients and families. Within a year, HRSA worked closely with bipartisan leaders in Congress to secure passage of the Securing the U.S. OPTN Act and substantially boost funding to support modernization efforts. Todays awards represent a key step forward in this work.