China's Ministry of Health
is drafting new rules to make organ donation easier for the
public.
The regulation will standardize the organ donation
procedures and encourage people to become donors.
"Many more donors are needed, but they often meet
difficulties when they apply, so the ministry must standardize the
application process and technology of transplants, which is
complicated and risky," said ministry spokesman Mao
Qun'an.
Mao was responding to questions about reports of
would-be donors having their wishes unrealized because of confusion
over the procedures or which agency to apply to.
The regulation would specify the whole application
process and stipulate the requirements for medical institutions
conducting transplants.
"Only the medical institutions that meet the
technological requirements can undertake transplant surgery," said
Mao.
It is estimated that two million Chinese need
transplants each year, but only 20,000 operations are conducted
because of a shortage of organs.
Foreign media have reported that organs are taken from
executed criminals, but the Ministry of Health denied this in
April, saying most organs in China had been voluntarily donated by
ordinary citizens on their deaths and a small number from executed
criminals who voluntarily signed donation approvals.
(Xinhua News Agency September 12, 2006)
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