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USA Health Children’s & Women’s Hospital marks more than 1,300 birth tissue donations

Since 2020, Children’s & Women’s Hospital has partnered with teleGen to provide mothers the opportunity to contribute to the development of medical products for wound healing and surgical repair.

Published Jul 16th, 2024

USA Health Children’s & Women’s Hospital, in partnership with teleGen, a regenerative medicine company, has marked a milestone: More than 1,300 birth tissue donations have been made by mothers delivering babies at the hospital since 2020. 

Birth tissue refers to biological tissues associated with childbirth and includes the placenta, umbilical cord, and amniotic membrane. A variety of therapies and procedures rely on tissue donation for wound repair and wound healing. The donated tissue collected by teleGen is used to treat patients who suffer from burns, diabetic ulcers, eye injuries, and other wounds and injuries.

A celebration was held at the hospital on July 10 to honor the generosity and compassion of the mothers who choose birth tissue donation.

“We are incredibly grateful to our patients who decide to make a tissue donation that has the potential to positively impact so many others in need,” said Mimi Munn, M.D., a maternal-fetal medicine physician, and professor and chair of obstetrics and gynecology at the Frederick P. Whiddon College of Medicine.

Since 2020, Children’s & Women’s Hospital has partnered with teleGen to provide the opportunity to contribute to the development of medical products for wound healing and surgical repair. Birth tissue from one birth, according to teleGen, can be used to treat as many as 50 patients who suffer from burns, diabetic ulcers, eye injuries or other illnesses.

To learn more about the process of birth tissue donations, visit teleGen.

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