LOVE Act
Sponsored By: Representative Malliotakis
Introduced
Summary
Pays hospitals to train staff who help patients find living kidney donors. This bill would create an 8-year Medicare demonstration that funds hospital-run training for living kidney donor facilitators and requires reporting on donor counts, patient outcomes, and potential Medicare savings.
Show full summary
- People with end-stage renal disease would gain trained facilitators to help identify potential living donors and guide donors and recipients through the donation process, aiming to increase living-donor transplants.
- Hospitals that perform kidney transplants would be eligible for annual Medicare payments to cover the reasonable costs of operating facilitator training programs.
- The Secretary must report to Congress on changes in living donors and transplants, recipient outcomes, and any Medicare cost effects from more transplants and less dialysis.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this bill affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Help finding living kidney donors
If enacted, this bill would create an 8-year Medicare demonstration to train hospital staff as living-kidney-donor facilitators. HHS would have to start the program within 180 days of enactment. Participating hospitals that perform kidney transplants would get yearly payments equal to the reasonable costs of running the training, as set by HHS. The training would help Medicare (Parts A and B) beneficiaries with end-stage renal disease find prospective living kidney donors and navigate the donation process. The Secretary could waive Social Security Act rules to run the demonstration. HHS would report to Congress on results: an initial report not later than 6 years after enactment (covering the first 5 years and comparing the prior 5 years), then one update a year later and two more annual updates. Reports must show changes in living donors and transplants, recipient outcomes, any Medicare cost savings from less dialysis, and interviews with facilitators, hospitals, donors, and recipients.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Malliotakis
NY • R
Cosponsors
Gottheimer
NJ • D
Sponsored 2/13/2026
Hoyle (OR)
OR • D
Sponsored 3/4/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
View on Congress.govTake It Personal
Get Your Personalized Policy View
Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.
Already have an account? Sign in