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Organ Procurement Jobs (NOW HIRING)

$29.44 - $43.79/hr

The Organ Donor Coordinator position is responsible for supporting the organ procurement services required for transplantation and maintains the peri-operative phase of recipient transplantation.

$29.44 - $43.79/hr

The Organ Donor Coordinator position communicates with all members of the Organ Procurement Organization (OPO), recovery and transplant teams, and recipient candidate and family to ensure proper ...

Organ Procurement Surgeon

Cleveland, OH · On-site

$242K - $290K/yr

Organ Procurement Surgeon CLEVELAND CLINIC The world class cardiothoracic surgery program at Cleveland Clinic's Sydell and Arnold Miller Family Heart, Vascular & Thoracic Institute is seeking Organ ...

Prepare and pack all required equipment, solutions, and medications for organ procurement, preservation, transplantation, or perfusion. * Assist staff to prepare the operating room for organ recovery ...

Prepare and pack all required equipment, solutions, and medications for organ procurement, preservation, transplantation, or perfusion. * Assist staff to prepare the operating room for organ recovery ...

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Organ Procurement information

See salary details

$45.5K

$95.9K

$147K

How much do organ procurement jobs pay per year?

As of Jul 14, 2026, the average yearly pay for organ procurement in the United States is $95,876.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $74,000.00 and $114,000.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What is the difference between Organ Procurement vs Organ Transplant Coordinator?

AspectOrgan ProcurementOrgan Transplant Coordinator
CertificationsCPR, organ procurement certifications, clinical licensesRN or transplant-specific certifications, CPR
Work EnvironmentHospitals, organ procurement organizations, surgical settingsHospitals, transplant centers, outpatient clinics
Primary ResponsibilitiesIdentify donors, coordinate organ retrieval, ensure legal complianceManage transplant patients, coordinate organ allocation, post-transplant care

Organ Procurement specialists focus on identifying donors and retrieving organs, while Organ Transplant Coordinators manage the transplant process and patient care. Both roles require medical knowledge and certification, but their daily tasks and work environments differ significantly.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive in Organ Procurement, and why are they important?

To thrive in Organ Procurement, you need a background in healthcare or life sciences, knowledge of human anatomy, and relevant certifications such as Certified Procurement Transplant Coordinator (CPTC). Familiarity with donor management systems, organ preservation techniques, and regulatory compliance tools is essential. Strong communication, emotional intelligence, and the ability to work under pressure are critical soft skills for this role. These skills ensure ethical, efficient organ recovery and transplantation processes, ultimately saving lives and supporting donor families.

What Are Organ Procurement Jobs?

Organ procurement jobs focus on one aspect of the transplant process. There are also professionals whose responsibilities involve taking steps to coordinate the different aspects of organ procurement. As a donor information coordinator, you create case files for donors, while the duties of an organ procurement coordinator include assessing information when organs become available, overseeing transport of the organ, and preparing the transplant recipient. A transplant physician evaluates the patient and screens the organ to ensure a match. Your duties as a preservationist are to ensure that the organ remains functional during the transportation process and inside the operating room.

What is organ procurement?

Organ procurement is the process of identifying potential organ donors, obtaining consent from families, surgically removing organs from deceased or living donors, and transporting them to hospitals where they are transplanted into patients in need. This process involves coordination among hospitals, organ procurement organizations, and transplant teams to ensure organs are recovered safely and efficiently. The ultimate goal is to save lives by providing healthy organs to recipients with end-stage organ failure.

What are the typical challenges faced by professionals in organ procurement, and how can they be managed?

Organ procurement professionals often encounter challenges such as coordinating with multiple medical teams, handling time-sensitive logistics, and managing emotional interactions with donor families. These roles require strong communication skills, adaptability, and emotional resilience to ensure the process runs smoothly. Support from experienced colleagues, clear protocols, and ongoing training can help professionals navigate these challenges while maintaining the highest standards of care and ethical practice.
What cities are hiring for Organ Procurement jobs? Cities with the most Organ Procurement job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of Organ Procurement jobs? The most popular types of Organ Procurement jobs are:
What states have the most Organ Procurement jobs? States with the most job openings for Organ Procurement jobs include:
Infographic showing various Organ Procurement job openings in the United States as of July 2026, with employment types broken down into 1% Internship, 2% As Needed, 80% Full Time, 13% Part Time, and 4% Contract. Highlights an 84% Physical, 1% Hybrid, and 15% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $95,876 per year, or $46.1 per hour.

$29.44 - $43.79/hr

Full-time

Re-posted 2 days ago


Job description


Job Summary and Responsibilities
Job Summary/Purpose:
 
The Organ Donor Coordinator position is responsible for supporting the organ procurement services required for transplantation and maintains the peri-operative phase of recipient transplantation. Primary responsibilities for this position include logistics management, preservation, packaging and labeling of organs for transplantation; facilitating organ offer review and acceptance processes, recipient admission and pre-operative preparation for transplantation, and ensuring adherence to current Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network/United Network of Organ Sharing (OPTN/UNOS) regulations and allocation policies.  The Organ Donor Coordinator position communicates with all members of the Organ Procurement Organization (OPO), recovery and transplant teams, and recipient candidate and family to ensure proper coordination of the organ recovery and transplant events.
Essential Functions:
 

PEOPLE - 20%

Communicates in an active, positive, and effective manner to all team members and outside organization partners while facilitating the critical events of recovery and transplantation. Collects the appropriate data necessary for decision-making regarding organ acceptance/decline for transplant and communicates with the organ procurement agency and as well as the physicians/surgeons to relay donor and/or recipient information accurately and timely to support the transplant event. Participates in organ pumping/ perfusion per transplant center protocols. 

Identifies and responds to the psychosocial needs of the transplant candidate/ family/caregivers during the pre-operative and peri-operative phases of transplantation.

Fosters teamwork approach in all interactions with peers and team members, offering assistance. Anticipates needs of other team members; proactively offering assistance. Contributes to meeting the department score for employee engagement.


SERVICE - 30%

Participates in organ recovery process according to transplant center protocol.  Ensures proper review of donor verifications (surgical time-out) prior to recovery with a recovery surgeon. Facilitates transportation arrangements, assures availability of necessary supplies and equipment for recovery.  Accompanies recovery surgeons to donor facilities via applicable transportation.  Assists in surgical recovery procedures as required.  Assists in appropriate organ and tissue-specific preservation procedures.  Ensures the organ packaging and labeling process per protocol are followed.

Participates in the organ transplant process according to transplant center protocol.  Responds timely to initial organ offers, verifies all donor and recipient information, collects appropriate data necessary for decision making regarding organ acceptance/decline for transplant and prepares a thorough report for the physician to review.  Facilitates admission/transfer of recipient for transplantation and oversees pre-operative process.  Coordinates timing of events with procurement team and OPO.

Enters appropriate acceptance and decline codes via DonorNet in a timely manner and alerts appropriate parties for any variances in allocation documentation immediately.  Exhibits ability to timely remove transplant recipients from waitlist per OPTN/UNOS regulations.  Participates in recipient waitlist management review forums as indicated and monitor appropriate communications affecting recipient’s candidacy.  Provide timely notifications at specified time-points throughout the recovery and transplant process and ensure thorough hand-offs to team members if required.  Contributes to meeting department and organ program targets for process and patient satisfaction measures.


QUALITY/SAFETY - 30%

Communicates effectively to ensure proper review of donor medical history and diagnostic data; allocation sequencing; and recipient medical information, current medical status, and crossmatch results if applicable with appropriate members of recovery and transplant team physicians/surgeons to determine eligibility for organ acceptance and recipient eligibility for transplantation.

Ensures organs and tissues will be recovered, packaged, and transplanted to maximize utilization in accordance with OPTN/UNOS policies.   Preserves organs and tissue according to OPO and national standards to ensure maximum viability for transplantation including pumping/perfusion of organs.

Ensures adequate tissue typing material is recovered for each organ and tissue and archiving as well as inclusion of vascular grafts as required with packaged extra renal organs and tissue.  Ensures proper documentation of extra-renal organ and tissue anatomy and abnormal findings and kidney anatomy, measurements, and abnormal findings.

Operates within Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), OPTN, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) regulatory compliance throughout the recovery and transplant event processes. Maintains CMS and OPTN compliant documentation throughout the phases of the process including but not limited to logistics documentation, procurement and transplant verification forms, Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) requests, HIM-required consents, organ donor disclosure, and recovery transplant reporting records. Contributes to meeting department and organ program targets for quality, compliance, and safety.

FINANCE - 10%

Maintains and submits accurate data for hospital-based statistics and regulatory agencies such as UNOS/UNET, CMS, and Medicaid to ensure proper department financial management, compliance with all governmental reporting requirements, and proper quality outcomes monitoring.  These data requirements include, but are not limited to  units of service, recovery logistics tracking, recovery supply utilization, and UNOS TIEDI forms.

Utilizes appropriate supply inventory to ensure supply costs are maximized. Follows protocol for transportation logistics to maintain expenses in alignment with quality management. Submits variances timely to management for proper billing management. Contributes to meeting department and organ program financial measures on department dashboard. 

GROWTH/INNOVATION - 10%

Participates and contributes in department initiatives for quality and process/performance improvement.  Works in collaboration with the team to provide solutions by participating in department projects and shared governance activities.  Provides staff and community education in the areas of transplant and organ donation. Participates in department donor awareness events, educational opportunities, and community activities.

Identifies and assumes responsibility for its own learning needs, consults with healthcare team experts, and seeks continuing education opportunities to meet those needs. Ensures own career discussions occur with appropriate management.


On-Call - Note that employees may be required to be on-call during emergencies (i.e., Disaster, Severe Weather Event, etc.) regardless of selection above.

The job summary and responsibilities listed above are designed to indicate the general nature of the work performed within this job. They are not designed to contain or be interpreted as a comprehensive inventory of all job responsibilities required of employees assigned to this job. Employees may be required to perform other duties as assigned.
Job Requirements
 
Minimum Qualifications:
-Associates degree or higher or a  graduate from an applicable Health Care Technical program

-Three years of healthcare experience, one year which much be in direct patient care/contact or Organ Procurement Organization

-Prefer Transplant related experience

Licensure and Certifications:

-Certified Surgical Technologist (CST) or

-Certified Surgical First Assistant (CFA)

 
Where You'll Work

Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center is an internationally recognized leader in research and clinical excellence that has given rise to breakthroughs in cardiovascular care, neuroscience, oncology, transplantation, and more. Our team’s efforts have led to the creation of many research programs and initiatives to develop advanced treatments found nowhere else in the world. In our commitment to advancing standards in an ever-evolving healthcare environment, our new McNair Campus is designed around the human experience—modeled on evidence-based practices for the safety of patients, visitors, staff, and physicians. The 27.5-acre campus represents the future of healthcare through a transformative alliance focused on leading-edge patient care, research, and education. Our strong alliance with Texas Heart® Institute and Baylor College of Medicine allows us to bring our patients a powerful network of care unlike any other. Our collaboration is focused on increasing access to care through a growing network of leading specialists and revolutionizing healthcare to save lives and improve the health of the communities we serve.

Qualifications:
 
Minimum Qualifications:
-Associates degree or higher or a  graduate from an applicable Health Care Technical program

-Three years of healthcare experience, one year which much be in direct patient care/contact or Organ Procurement Organization

-Prefer Transplant related experience

Licensure and Certifications:

-Certified Surgical Technologist (CST) or

-Certified Surgical First Assistant (CFA)

 
Employment Type: Full Time