Urgent
need to clear misconceptions and taboo about organ donation
Number of organ donors is abysmally low
in India
New Delhi, 03 December 2017: According
to statistics, every single person can save up to 7 lives by donating organs.
Apart from this, at any given point, there are about 8 to 10 potential donors
in the ICUs of any major city. Despite this, the number of organ donors in
India is abysmally low at about 0.34 persons per million of population. As per
the IMA, these statistics indicate the urgent need for people to step in and
start donating their organs.
Organ
donation is the process of Retrieving or Procuring an organ from a live or
deceased person known as a donor. The process of recovering organs is called
harvesting. This organ is transplanted into the recipient who needs that organ.
There are two types of organ donation: Live Donation and Deceased or Cadaver
Donation.
Speaking
about this, Padma Shri Awardee Dr K K
Aggarwal, National President Indian Medical Association (IMA) and President
Heart Care Foundation of India (HCFI) and Dr RN Tandon – Honorary Secretary General
IMA in a joint statement, said, “Organ donation is still an unsolved
problem in our country. However, there has been a recent amendment to the Organ
Transplant Act 2014, according to which it is now compulsory for every doctor
to follow mandatory required request for organ donation. Live Donation is from
a healthy and living person. This can only be done in the case of a liver or a
kidney. When we talk about pledging one’s organs or about organ donation, we
talk about deceased organ donation or cadaver organ donation. This is organ
donation from a person who has been declared brain dead by a team of authorized
doctors at a hospital. A person is said to be brain dead when there is an
irreversible loss of consciousness, absence of brain stem reflexes and no
spontaneous respiration. Organ donation can even provide someone with a second
chance at life. For many, this process is a way to go back to a normal
lifestyle, ability to see, freedom from pain, or even the ability to become
mobile again.”
The
absence of brain stem function is documented by conducting the following five
tests: absence of Pupillary reflex response to light; absence of Corneal
reflexes; absence of vestibulo-ocular reflex; absence of cranial nerve response
to pain; and absence of gag and cough reflexes.
Adding
further, Dr Aggarwal, said, “We need
to communicate to people that they can live even after death through organ
donation. There is also a need to remove myths and misconceptions about organ
donation and spread the message around. As per IMA’s policies, 100% IMA members
should pledge their organs / tissues after cardiac or brain death.”
Here
are some myths about organ donation, demystified.
·
Age is not a barrier for organ donation. Even
people above the age of 80 have become organ and tissue donors.
·
There is no requirement to be in perfect health
for donation. Even those who smoke, drink or don’t have a healthy diet can
donate.
·
Organ and tissue donation do not disfigure the
body in any way.
In case of an accident, the doctor will always try to
save the life of the victim first. Organ donation is considered as an option
only when the person dies due to certain circumstances.
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