What This Statute Says
The statute coordinates Arizona's anatomical gift article with federal E-Sign law.
This act modifies, limits and supersedes the electronic signatures in global and national commerce act, but does not modify, limit or supersede section 101(a) of that act (15 United States Code section 7001) or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices described in section 103(b) of that act (15 United States Code section 7003(b)).
A.R.S. § 36-863The provision allows electronic donor registrations, electronic documents of gift, and electronic recordkeeping under the article without conflict with federal E-Sign law, while preserving certain consumer-protection and paper-notice requirements.
When This Statute Comes Into Play
The rule applies to the technology infrastructure behind donor registries, electronic healthcare records, and online registration portals. It allows MVD systems to capture donor elections electronically and route them to the registry without legal questions about whether E-Sign requires more.
What This Means for Arizona Families
The donor registry and online registration tools work because of this statute. You can register as a donor on the registry's website, your election is recorded electronically, and the document of gift exists in electronic form rather than as a paper card. The federal E-Sign Act's consumer-protection floor remains in place for unrelated transactions.
For families, the practical effect is convenience. You can update your donor status from your phone or computer. The registration is just as binding as a paper document of gift signed in front of a notary. Our FAQ on making organ-donation wishes legally binding covers the registration mechanics. The same electronic infrastructure can pull donation information from your healthcare directive in compatible electronic health records, ensuring your wishes are accessible when needed.