A dedicated specialised support unit for organ donors – dubbed the “Life Pod" – will officially launch at Tygerberg Hospital on Wednesday, 4 June 2025. The groundbreaking facility, the first of its kind in Africa, is the flagship achievement of Save7, a non-profit organisation established and managed by medical students at Stellenbosch University's (SU) Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences (FMHS).
The Life Pod will provide specialised care for consented organ donors, maintaining their organs' viability during the critical 12 to 36-hour period before transplant surgery. This dedicated space addresses a fundamental bottleneck in South Africa's transplant system: a shortage of ICU beds that often forces potential donors to be transferred to morgues before their organs can be used to save lives.
Addressing a silent crisis
South Africa faces one of the world's lowest organ donation rates at just 0.6%, while over 4 000 patients await life-saving transplants. The shortage isn't due to lack of medical expertise – South African surgeons performed the world's first heart transplant – but rather infrastructure limitations that prevent viable organs from reaching those who need them.
“Transplantation in South Africa is fairly stagnant," explains Prof Elmi Muller, Dean of the FMHS and past president of The Transplant Society. “We have, over the past 10 years, had more or less the same number of donors in the country, particularly deceased donors. Meanwhile, our patients that need transplants have been growing, and the waiting lists have become longer."
The Life Pod directly tackles this challenge by providing a dedicated space where brain-dead donors can be maintained without competing for scarce Intensive Care Unit (ICU) beds needed by living patients. “Unfortunately, ICU beds are one of the most scarce medical resources in the country," says Jonty Wright, a fifth-year medical student and founder of Save7, the student organisation behind the initiative. “That often means that donors are left by the wayside, and seven people who would have been saved by that donor have to go find somebody else. And they often don't."
From student initiative to medical infrastructure
Founded in 2021 by FMHS medical students, Save7 has evolved from a simple awareness campaign to become the driving force behind South Africa's first dedicated donor support unit.
“Save7 started with a story," explains Wright. “Lynette Stuurman, a shopkeeper here at our Maties store was a 30-year-old woman born with a genetic kidney condition. Her sister had died two years previously, awaiting a life-saving kidney transplant that never came. Now she was sitting in the exact same position, quite literally waiting to die."
The then first-year medical students were touched by the story and decided to take action. “We got together and said we are not going to wait until we get our medical degrees to do something about this," says Wright. What began as awareness campaigns in lecture halls evolved into a comprehensive approach to addressing systemic barriers in organ transplantation.
The students identified that 60 viable organs were going to waste each week – organs that could save patients. Through mentorship with faculty members, particularly Prof Elmin Steyn, they recognised that the solution required more than awareness, it needed infrastructure.
From vision to reality
Raising the R400 000 needed for the Life Pod required innovative fundraising approaches. Four students – Henri van der Westhuizen, Gerhard Niewoudt, Alexander van Wyk, and Jonty Wright – competed in Ironman 70.3 triathlons as part of their “Tri for Life" campaign, combining athletic endurance with awareness-raising for organ donation.
The project received crucial support from The Health Foundation, which matched student fundraising efforts, and Tygerberg Hospital administration provided the physical space and operational backing. The students also secured donated equipment, including specialised beds, monitors, ventilators, and essential medical lines.
Sachen Naidu, Secretary General of Save7, describes the Life Pod as “a dedicated donor support room, designed specifically to maintain and nurse a brain-dead donor. It's kitted out with everything you would expect – from patient monitors to infusion sets to ventilators. We've got everything needed to support and take care of a donor."
Expected impact
Conservative estimates suggest the Life Pod will facilitate one to two donor cases per month, potentially saving over 100 lives annually. Each donor can provide up to seven organs, dramatically expanding the pool of available transplants for South African patients.
“This Life Pod represents a major advancement in our fight to save lives through organ donation," says Prof André van der Merwe, head of Transplant Surgery and Urology at Tygerberg Hospital. “Witnessing the next generation of medical professionals leading this vital project with such passion and determination is truly inspiring."
Looking forward
The Life Pod launch represents just the beginning of Save7's ambitions. The organisation plans to replicate the model in other provinces, with preliminary discussions already underway in Gauteng. Their ultimate goal is creating a national network of specialised donor facilities that can dramatically improve South Africa's transplant capacity.
“We hope this project will help promote engagement with families at the end of life to counsel them about the possibilities that exist to help others at what is always a time of loss and grief. We look forward to seeing how this project can be integrated into the existing health ecosystem, supporting the need for organ and tissue donation," says Dr David Thomson, Chairperson of the Western Cape Provincial Organ and Tissue Donation Committee within the Western Cape Department of Health and Wellness.
Core members of the Save7 team: Naazim Nagdee, Jonty Wright, Sachen Naidu and Suhayl Khalfey.Photo: Faculty f Medicine and Health Sciences