Body Broker Bill Introduced in Congress

Jul 5, 2021 | News & Announcements

When a family chooses to donate a loved one’s body for education or research, they do so with the hope that they will help others. Regrettably, many are unknowingly contributing to a for-profit industry in which the body of their loved one could be traded as raw material in a largely unregulated national market. With the introduction of the Consensual Donation and Research Integrity Act of 2021 (CDRI Act) in the House (H.R. 4062), which has the full support of NFDA, Congress is taking a significant step toward protecting the dignity of donors and offering peace of mind to families.

“We have heard heart-breaking stories from families that believed they were doing a good thing when they donated a loved one’s body for medical research,” said NFDA President R. Bryant Hightower Jr., CFSP. “They truly believed the donation would create a positive legacy. However, the repugnant actions of body brokers have only caused further grief. We strongly urge the House to pass the CDRI Act and provide long-overdue accountability and transparency to the whole-body donation process and ensure donors’ bodies are treated with dignity and respect at all times.”

Please contact your local representative today to ask for their backing for this important bill, which will create safe and regulated procedures for the generous and selfless donations that families across our state are making.

Find Your Representative at:
https://www.arkansashouse.org/representatives/members

Explore More

Recent Posts

Moving Forward After Loss – How Widows Can Heal and Rebuild Life

For widows and widowers who are past the initial shock, the quiet can feel unsettling and strangely heavy. The grief transition often brings post-grief challenges that don’t look like constant tears, decision fatigue, loneliness in ordinary moments, guilt when...

How to Create a Warm and Personal Digital Memory Book for Loved Ones

Busy parents coordinating grandparents, siblings, and kids across cities and time zones often feel the same ache: the photos and stories that matter most are scattered across phones, chats, and half-remembered conversations. The core tension is simple, everyone means...