We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we GIVE
One donor can save as many as 9 lives
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If you had the ability to save 9 lives...wouldn't you? |
After brain-death, organs like heart, lungs, intestines, pancreas, liver and kidneys as well as tissues like cornea of the eye, blood vessels, bones, tendons can be donated to save or improve the lives of many others. Immediately after the heart has stopped beating in certain situations the kidneys and liver can be rapidly harvested and used for transplantation. However beyond a few minutes after the heart stops beating,only tissues can be used for donation.
In India, donation after heart stops beating (donation after cardiac death ) has not yet been introduced for multiple reasons. The law allows organ retrieval from brain dead (but heart beating) donors and living related donors.
There is a massive shortage of donor organs in India
Organ donation rate in India is among the lowest in the world standing at 0.08 donations per million deaths as compared to 10-30 per million deaths seen in most parts of the western world. A single organ donor can provide a liver, two kidneys, intestine, pancreas, heart, two lungs that can potentially save the lives of nine others who are suffering from failure of their own organs. In addition sight of two blind persons can be restored. Tissues such as bone, tendons and skin from a single donor can be used to restore function and improve life of several people. As a result of this, the nearly 70 lakh Indian patients with corneal blindness, 3 lakh with dialysis dependent renal failure and 1 lakh with advanced liver disease need nothing short of a miracle to happen in order to get a cornea, kidney or liver from a brain dead (deceased donor).
Major hurdles in organ donation
Legal
Social
Procedural
Legal hurdles
The Human Organ Transplant Act passed by parliament in 1995 has been passed by most state assemblies. The law has performed commendably in streamlining the process of organ donation, brain death declaration and significantly reducing if not eliminating the ghastly organ trade. However certain well-meaning but probably ill conceived rules have inadvertently prevented organ donation from really taking off. The recently introduced amendments would probably help increase the facilitation when they are in effect.
Prominent among the hurdles are:
For organ harvesting to be performed the hospital where the donor is must only be a transplant center or a registered non-transplant retrieval centre
Brain death declaration required certification by four doctors one of whom must be a neurologist or neurosurgeon
The person in charge of the body (next of kin) has to consent for donation to proceed even if it overrules the brain-dead persons expressed living intention in the form or donor card or living will.
This excludes a large number of hospitals with ICUs and potentially brain dead donors from offering organs for donation. As a result less than 10% potential organ donors in India end up donating organs as opposed to more than 25% in the rest of the world.
Social
The social, cultural and religious issues are myriad.
Despite most religions teachings
having no major objections to organ donation, most families decline donation on religious grounds based on misconceptions that a person without organs will not be allowed in heaven or a person who is not buried or cremated with all organs will be reborn without those organs.
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Religious teachings & organ donation |
All the above however pales in front of the rank indifference and apathy shown by medical professionals towards the entire process of organ donation. In the absence of motivation from being a part of a transplant center, a majority of medical professions continue to manage patients with irreversible coma without broaching the subject of organ donation or a reluctant to discuss the issue with patient family citing fears of angry backlash from family members.An equal number of medical professionals themselves harbor numerous misconceptions and misgivings regarding organ donation. The medical education in India until recently had no inclusion of organ donation and brain death in its curriculum.
Procedural
In a survey it was estimated that there has been a 51% increase in unnatural deaths in the decade 2002-2012. Nearly 32.6 accidental occur in India per 100,000 population. In 2012-2013 there were nearly 4,00,000 accidental deaths of which more than 94% were unnatural. nearly 42% of these occur following rail or road traffic accidents. Out of all accidental deaths, approximately 10-15% are due to irreversible injury to brain. Therefor at current estimates, there are between 30000-40000 potential candidates for donation after brain death amongst accidental deaths annually. However less than 500 donations happen across the country in any given year.
Ignoring the legal and social hurdles for a moment, this has not only a lot to do with poor trauma and transport services for maintaining these victims till they reach hospital but also to red-tapism, tedious and laborious paperwork and alarming apathy on part of investigating officers, forensic experts and other agencies in allowing organ donation to proceed in the brain dead individual is a victim in a crime or accident scene.
All is not lost...through tireless campaigning by several individuals, organisations and agencies of governments who have awakened albeit belatedly to the issue, the organ donation rate has nearly quadrupled over the last 10 years. There is a lot of distance to be covered. At a mere 1-2 donations per million deaths, this country can meet its transplant needs so that nobody with organ failure has to die waiting for an organ.
The medical fraternity should lead by example by pledging their organs and encouraging their friends and family to register to be donors.
At my center, to commemorate World Organ Donation Day, we took a pledge to donate all our usable organs after our death and to work to encourage our friends and family towards registering themselves as organ donors.
"We, the doctors and staff of
Continental Hospital, on the occasion of World Organ Donation Day, hereby
unconditionally pledge to donate all our usable organs and tissues following
our death to save the lives of others. We take this pledge in the presence of
the almighty and our soul as our witnesses.
We also swear to work towards educating our
families and friends about organ donation and also to encourage them to be
organ donors and give the gift of life to others after they are gone" ![]() |
Organ donation logo |
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Pledge board signing |
I invite and urge all readers to join this movement with a poem I penned sometime ago
Your body is but a shrine That envelops your soul A gift from your maker To help discharge your earthly role When it's time and end is nigh Your soul readies to depart The body, it's shell Free from your essence Is but a wilted flower Devoid of fragrance Consigned to flames or ceremonially buried To tune of hymns, chants and litanies varied Into wasteful ashes or earth shall return All precious body parts turn by turn Many a heart, kidneys and liver In needy others which could still deliver Arise, its never too early to make the choice Gift your organs after you've left Save many lives that remain bereft Wipe tears from many a eye That's the only way to leave this world on a high!
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