Only 0.08 per cent of Indians donate
their organs
Only 0.08 per cent of Indians donate their organs to the needy as compared to 70-80 per
cent of Spaniards and Belgians, health experts said on Saturday. Every year
200,000 people in India need a new kidney and 100,000 need a new liver, but
only two to three per cent of the demand for new organs is met, they said on
the occasion of Organ Donation Day on August 13.
The low proportion of
organ donors in Indian population can largely be attributed to ignorance,
superstition and an absence of conducive regulatory framework, said the
experts.
"It's
tragic that even after so much promotion of the idea, India lags so much in
organ donation. There has been almost no improvement in the situation in the
last couple of years," said Ravinder Malhotra, Director of the Centre for
Liver Transplant and Gastrosciences at the Saroj Super Speciality Hospital.
"Children can
also be made organ donors after parental consent. There is a need to explain
and promote the entire concept of organ donation more," he said.
Malhotra said the laws
need to be changed to make them more facilitative of organ donation.
In some
Western countries, the body of a citizen who has died goes into the custody of
the state which can then take decisions regarding organ procurement and
donation, some doctors said.
In India, on
the contrary, the consent of the close relatives of the deceased who pledged
their organs is important, which is negative in most cases, said P.K. Bhardwaj,
a Delhi-based doctor.
"More
people die waiting for a transplant as availability and suitability is less.
Anybody can be a donor; depending on the medical condition, organs and tissues
can be donated for transplant," said Bhardwaj. According to the Organ
Retrieval Banking Organisation of AIIMS-New Delhi, over 22,500 people across
the country have registered since 2010 to donate their organs after their
death. The health experts said religious leaders should endorse organ donation
programmes as a high percentage of people avoid organ donation on religious
grounds.
Bhavadee Sharma, a senior
doctor with AIIMS, said: "People have to accept organ donation just like
the way they have accepted blood donation. It will take time but will certainly
happen in the near future."
Along with
change in laws for organ donation, there is a need for convincing people about
brain death, which a large number of people do not consider death, Sharma said.
Source: www.zeenews.india.com
17.08.2016
If we don’t learn to control our thoughts, we will
never learn to control our behavior
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