Greg Segal

Segal's research has been heavily cited through three separate congressional investigations from the Senate Finance Committee,[2] the House Energy & Commerce Committee,[3] and the House Oversight Committee [4] into failures and abuses in the U.S. organ donation system, and has led to regulatory reforms projected by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to save more than 7,200 lives every year.

[5] In July 2023, Congress unanimously passed legislation to support the break up of the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network monopoly[6] and Segal was invited to a small bill signing ceremony in the Oval Office.

Segal also provided expert and whistleblower testimony at a bipartisan House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing in September 2024.

[13] Organize won the $1 Million 1st Prize in the 2014 Verizon Powerful Answers Award as the top healthcare start-up of the year[14] and was awarded the Innovator in Residence position at the Office of the Secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services.

[15] Segal has been covered by The Wall Street Journal[16], Bloomberg[17], The New York Times,[18] which called Organize one of 2016's "Biggest Ideas in Social Change",[19] as well as the Washington Post,[20] Slate[21] and FastCompany,[22] and his work at Organize was highlighted on HBO's Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

Greg Segal, 2014