The demand for transplantable organs greatly exceeds the supply in the pediatric population, mainly due to the size restrictions required for successful transplants in these smaller patients and the overall health of the general pediatric population. In current practice, pediatric organ donation occurs via one of two pathways: either after the donor meets criteria for brain death (DBD) or following the process of DCD. A recent large study found that 21% of pediatric patients who died in the PICU were declared braindead and half of those patients went on to be organ donors. 1 In the practice of DCD, donation is offered after a decision to WLST has been made. Reports demonstrate 50% -70% of all children dying in the pediatric intensive care unit died following WLST. 2,3 A recent study demonstrated a pediatric mortality rate of 2.3% in the pediatric intensive care unit, which has halved compared