Friday, 30 December 2011

Emedinews:Insights on Medicolegal issues:Amendments to the Transplant Act 1994 is required to enhance cadaver organ retrieval for transplantation to bridge the huge demand-supply gap.



• It should be made mandatory for hospital ICUs to declare all brain deaths and register them with an online central organ registry for better coordination of cadaver organ donation, retrieval and transplantation.
• The hospitals equipped with ventilators and artificial life support system must make mandatory effort to coordinate with organ bank and retrieve organs and the reason of failure must be documented for further review
• The concept of 'required request' required to be introduced, wherein hospitals will be allowed to ask ICU patients, whether they would be willing to donate organs
• The pool of donors, including increasing the supply of organs by widening the definition of 'near relatives' by allowing organ swaps among needy families, as well as, simplifying cadaver transplant procedures.
• The paired matching should be permitted i. e. if patient A's donor does not match A and likewise for patient B, then donor switch should be allowed, if it results in a match. Swaps or exchanges between families unable to fulfill the need of their family member in need of a transplant
• The World Medical Association also recommends that “The physician may, when the patient cannot reverse the final process of cessation of vital functions, apply such artificial means as are necessary to keep organs active for transplantation provided he acts in accordance with the laws of the country or by virtue of a formal consent given by the responsible person and provided the certification of death or the irreversibility of vital activity had been made by physicians unconnected with the transplantation and the patient receiving treatment.”
• These artificial means shall not be paid for by the donor or his relatives.
• Physicians treating the donor shall be totally independent of those treating the recipient and of the recipient himself.

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