Most frequently asked questions by living liver transplant patients and their families: Queuing: The National Health Planning Commission requires that living liver transplant patients are also required to enter the Health Planning Commission’s queuing system, which is regulated by the Ministry of Health and queried by the transplant community. The queue requires patients to provide liver function, kidney function, coagulation function, blood type, a full set of pre-transfusion (Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, HIV, Syphilis, etc.) and a copy of their ID card. Which relatives can donate liver (as a donor?) Patient’s parents, children, close nephews and nieces, wife (or husband) (married for more than 3 years or have children) Basic requirements for donors: ① blood type compatibility, i.e. same blood type or donor is type O; ② relatives who meet the above conditions; ③ for transplants between adults, donor and recipient are similar or slightly smaller in size; ④ feel healthy and have a healthy physical examination. After liver evaluation, the liver can theoretically be divided into two parts, part of which is reserved for the donor and the other part can be transplanted to the recipient; ⑤ the family of the liver donor is willing and can sign; ⑥ the local police station certificate (kinship between the donor and the recipient, handling police officer’s phone number, etc.), original hukou book, original ID card and information on the condition of the donor and recipient are submitted to the hospital and the provincial health planning commission to obtain approval.