The journey begins
Living kidney donation follows a structured, phased approach designed to protect your health and support informed decision‑making at every step.
Each phase in the living kidney donation process builds on the one before it, starting with education and initial testing and moving through surgery, recovery and long‑term follow‑up care. The sections below outline what happens in each phase and how the living kidney donor team supports you throughout your donation journey.
Phase 1: Getting started
Phase 1 is the starting point of the living kidney donation process. It includes education, consent and initial medical testing to determine whether it is safe for you to move forward.
What if you are not a match?
If testing shows that you are not a compatible match with your intended recipient, living donation may still be possible through the Kidney Paired Donation (KPD) Program.
Through KPD Program:
- You and your recipient are entered into the program together.
- You may be matched with another donor-recipient pair.
- Nondirected anonymous donors may also participate.
You must still complete all phases of the donor evaluation to participate in KPD.
What happens next
At the end of Phase 1, the living kidney donor team will contact you to let you know:
- If you can proceed to Phase 2.
- If more testing is needed before moving forward.
- If donation is not recommended at this time based on your results.
The decision is always guided by your safety and long-term health.
During your work-up, our team will consider:
- The current health of the potential living kidney donor.
- Risk factors to the living kidney donor should they proceed with donation.
- The long-term health of the living kidney donor after donation.
Phase 2: Taking a closer look
Phase 2 includes more detailed medical testing and in-depth appointments with members of the living kidney donor team. These steps help confirm that donation is safe for you now and in the long term.
One-day evaluation program
The Ottawa Hospital offers one-day evaluations for Phase 2. This allows most tests and donor team appointments to be completed in a single day at the General Campus, typically between 7:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. The program runs once a month and can accommodate up to three potential donors. Your nursing coordinator will talk with you about whether this option is suitable for you.
What Phase 2 helps determine
Together, Phases 1 and 2 allow the team to determine whether you are healthy enough to donate now, whether your kidney is suitable for the recipient, and whether you are likely to remain healthy over your lifetime after donation. If you are unable to proceed or need further testing, the living kidney donor team will support you and help guide next steps.
Phase 3: Final assessments
Phase 3 takes place once you have been approved to proceed with living kidney donation. This phase focuses on preparing you safely for surgery and confirming that both you and the recipient are still ready to move forward.
Phase 4: Donation day
Phase 4 is the day of your living kidney donation surgery. Your care team will guide you through each step and closely monitor your health throughout your hospital stay.
Phase 5: Recovery and follow-up care
Phase 5 focuses on your recovery after surgery, both in hospital and at home, as well as the long-term follow-up care that supports your health after donation. Recovery happens gradually, and each person’s experience is different.
Emotional recovery
Emotional recovery is an important part of healing. Some donors will experience feelings of sadness or low mood after donation. This may include grieving the loss of a kidney, stress from the evaluation and surgery, or changes in daily routine and social life. For some donors, the focus shifting to the recipient can also feel challenging.
If you would like support during this time, contact your nurse. Support from a social worker is available.
Follow-up care after kidney donation
Follow-up care helps ensure your long-term health after donation.
You will have an appointment with the surgeon four to six weeks after surgery and complete bloodwork before this visit.
You will also see a kidney doctor (nephrologist) at six months and one year after surgery, with bloodwork completed before each visit.
After the first year, you will continue yearly follow-up with bloodwork. At that point, your care may be transferred to your family doctor, depending on your situation.
Life after kidney donation
Long-term health after donation includes healthy daily habits. You will be encouraged to:
- Drink 1.5 to two litres of water each day.
- Maintain a healthy diet.
- Exercise regularly.
- Avoid contact sports.
You should limit the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such as Aleve, Advil, Motrin, ibuprofen, Celebrex and Arthrotec. If another health care provider prescribes an NSAID, contact the Living Kidney Donor Program.
Maintaining a primary care provider
The living kidney donor team strongly encourages you to maintain a relationship with a primary care provider, such as a family doctor, nurse practitioner or physician assistant, both before and after donation.
Your primary care provider supports your general health needs, including prescription renewals, vaccinations, cancer screening, treatment of illnesses and referrals to other specialists.
While the Living Kidney Donor Program provides annual post-donation follow-up related to kidney health, it cannot provide ongoing primary care. Staying connected with a primary care provider and attending your yearly donor follow-up appointments helps support your long-term health.