What Is a Cadaver Donor?
The donation of corpses refers to the behavior that natural persons voluntarily indicated that after death, their executors donated all or part of their corpses to the medical scientific undertakings, and that after the death of a natural person who did not indicate his willingness to donate during his lifetime, his immediate family members would corpse Donation in whole or in part to the cause of medical science.
Corpse donation
Right!
- Chinese name
- Corpse donation
- Condition
- Adults over 18 years of age
- in principle
- Voluntary, free of charge
- Agency
- Red Cross
- The donation of corpses refers to the behavior that natural persons voluntarily indicated that after death, their executors donated all or part of their corpses to the medical scientific undertakings, and that after the death of a natural person who did not indicate his willingness to donate during his lifetime, his immediate family members would corpse Donation in whole or in part to the cause of medical science.
- The donation of the remains was done on a voluntary and free basis. You can first register at each registration acceptance station, and then go to a notary office for notarization.
- Adults over 18 years of age can apply for donations of remains in accordance with relevant procedures.
- Volunteers need to obtain the consent of their immediate family members and provide relevant proofs, and then bring 3 two-inch front half-length photos and related documents such as their household registration book and resident ID card to the county (city, district) Red Cross Apply for registration. After registration is completed, a donation card is issued to the donor by the registration agency. After the donor's death, the donor (the close relative of the donor or a person designated during his lifetime) informs the receiving unit to accept the remains. After the donation is made, the receiving unit shall notify the Red Cross Society and issue an honorary certificate to the donor's family.