After 15 years experience, Transplant Procurement Management (TPM) an international educational program aimed to train professionals in Transplant Coordination (TC), has examined the worldwide impact of its training regarding donation rates. Its courses implementation has empowered a constant growth of organ procurement (2005 Spanish pmp is 35.1). This model gradually spread to other countries, such as Lebanon, where there has been a growing average donation rate of 58.62% through last 5 years. Countries gathered in four areas considering those with more than 10 country representatives attending the TC courses: 10 countries from Latin America (LAT), 10 from Eastern Europe (EE), 9 from Western Europe (WE) and 6 from Middle East (ME). International Registry of Organ Donation and Transplantation (IRODaT) provided the donation activity data. The total number of donors and the growing percentage’s averages of donation pmp rates/year are considered according to participants/year/country. The number of participants was 587 in LAT, 401 in EE, 1720 in WE and 135 in ME. The number of donors increased from 1195 to 2315 in LAT (93.7%), 460 to 993 in EE (115.8%), 3226 to 4538 in WE (40.7%) and 151 to 194 in ME (28.5%). The growing percentage’s average is 146% in LAT, 185% in EE, 32% in WE and 45% in ME. Whereas the donation rates are subjected to several factors such as religious, economic, cultural and legal issues, well-trained professionals may considerably contribute to raise them, suggesting that professional training is a successful method to increase donation rates.