Living donor liver
transplant is the only way currently to expand the available donor pool and
bridge the ever-expanding gap between need of transplantable organs and
availability of organs from deceased donors. The Human organ transplant act of
1994 allows ‘near relatives’ or those who are emotionally related to the
recipient to donate their organs out of love and affection. If the donor and
the recipient are domiciled in different states, the donor is required to
produce a no objection certificate (NOC) from his/her state of domicile that
needs to be submitted to the authorization committee of the competent authority
under that transplant act in the state where the transplant will be performed.
This certificate
does no more than verifies the credentials and particulars of the donor such as
donor’s name and address. It does not in anyway confirm or help establish that
the donation is out of love and affection and not out of coercion or financial
considerations. That is the statutory duty of the authorization committee of
the state where the transplant is being performed.
Procurement of
this NOC can be an extremely tedious and laborious process requiring multiple
trips to the health department officials and district administration. All this
imposes a significant cost and is a significantly demotivating factor. Not only
that, the time taken can needlessly delay a life saving transplant.
One hopes that
this decision by the Bombay High Court (Times of India March 6, 2013) will help clear the decks and avoid this
unnecessary hassle that patients and their families are subjected to during
their already stressful period.
4 comments:
RAHUL, WELL EXPLAINED - THANKS FOR SHARING
Thank you dr Suchak
I agree. I would like to thank you for sharing your wonderful blog to us. Me and my alternative liver cancer treatment center enjoys this. Thanks a lot.
Thank you. Hope to have the pleasure of more comments from you.
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