Whole Body Donation Program
Life Quest Anatomical's Whole Body Donation Program Frequently Asked Questions

The LifeQuest Anatomical Whole Body Donation Process:

Step 1: Registration

1. Do you qualify?
2. Complete our forms.
3. Once we receive the forms, we'll call you for a phone interview.
Step 2: Donor passes

1. Call and notify us.
2. We make all arrangements for transportation and handle all the paperwork.
Step 3: Support Science

Donating your body helps support medical research to fight cancer, heart disease, and other illnesses.
Step 4: Cremation

The donor receives a free cremation and the remains are returned to the family.

Have you made the decision to donate your body to science? Get our forms now.

Full body donations are one of the most compassionate alternatives to a funeral. Body donations are not the same as organ donations. Although organ donation is perhaps a better known alternative to a funeral, anatomical donations are a much greater gift to the future of humankind. By donating your body to science, you are helping give surgeons a learning opportunity which may lead to a more efficient technique or a new life-saving surgical procedure. Full body donations make cutting edge developments in the fields of cancer treatment, thoracic research and neurology studies possible.

Anatomical donations allow research institutions to discover new ways to fight serious diseases and disorders such as cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and multiple sclerosis. At LifeQuest, we also work closely with surgical teaching institutions. LifeQuest is affiliated with Innovations in Medical Education and Training (IMET), an organization of healthcare professionals committed to an ever-improving medical education standard. We carefully match anatomical gifts to the needs of accredited medical research institutions for the greatest benefit to research and education. A LifeQuest surgical technician accompanies the whole body donor at each stage of the journey. This commitment has made LifeQuest the program of choice for the leading research and teaching institutions in the nation.   

Donating your body to science carries an unfair stigma. The process of making an anatomical gift is really not that much different than the preparations that a mortician makes for a standard funeral. Unlike a standard funeral, however, the donation process provides viable tissues and specimens for research and study. When LifeQuest receives notice of the death of a potential donor, we discuss the possibility of donation with the family and physician. With family and medical consent, we recover the anatomical gifts most needed by research facilities and surgical teaching institutions. The remains are then cremated and may be returned to the family if they so choose. 

If you or a loved one is considering cremation as an alternative to a traditional funeral, please consider making an anatomical gift. LifeQuest provides a free cremation to those who make a full body donation to science. Making an anatomical gift is a final act of caring and leaves a legacy of hope for the future. Contact LifeQuest to request a donation packet and learn more about this procedure.

Donate Body to Science
In The News...
Michael J. Fox Foundation Awards $1.7 Million to Optimize and Leverage Brain ...
PR Newswire (press release)
These collaborations are designed to leverage the Brain and Body Donation Program's (BBDP) wealth of clinical and neuropathological samples and establish ...
Mayo shares in $1.7M from Michael Fox Foundation for Parkinson's researchTwin Cities Business Journal

all 7 news articles »

Allied Services donates to pancreatic cancer research
Wilkes Barre Times-Leader
Employees at Allied Services donated money raised through a Dress Down Day to the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, which funds research, supports advocacy ...


Health Newstrack

Researchers Find High Leptin Levels May Protect Against Alzheimer's Disease ...
Science Daily (press release)
16, 2009) ? Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have found that higher leptin (a protein that controls weight and appetite) levels ...
Research: Alzheimer's risk may be reduced by protein called leptinNewsChannel 9 WSYR
Fat Hormone May Protect Against Alzheimer'sBusinessWeek
Study examines Alzheimer's riskWRAL.com
WebMD -abc7.com -EurekAlert (press release)
all 114 news articles »

MSN Health & Fitness

Needle biopsies safer and just about as good at diagnosing breast cancer, say ...
Los Angeles Times (blog)
... Healthcare Research and Quality, apparently undaunted by the controversy it kicked up last month over mammograms, has waded back into the breast-cancer ...
Needle Biopsy Works Well in Diagnosing Breast CancerBusinessWeek
Non-surgical Method for Diagnosing Breast Cancer Safe, Nearly as Effective as ...eNews Park Forest
Needle biopsy alternative to breast cancer surgery?ABC7Chicago.com
TopNews New Zealand -Examiner.com -ModernMedicine
all 18 news articles »
Request Donation Packet
FAQs
Donate Body to Science
Body Donation | Anatomical Gift | Organ Donation vs Whole Body Donation | How to Donate Donate Your Body To Science |
Medical Research Cadavers | Free Cremation Services | Site Map |    Legal:  Terms of Use | Privacy
© Copyright 2007 LifeQuest Anatomical; all rights reserved.
Click to verify BBB accreditation and to see a BBB report.