China needs a law on organ
transplant to regulate donation procedures, and encourage and
facilitate people to become donors, lawmakers said on the sidelines
of the annual full session of the National People's Congress (NPC).
NPC deputy Li Bangliang, board chairman of East China
Pharmaceutical Group Corporation, said a proper law is needed to
guide the public how to donate their organs if they have such an
intention.
"With a large number of organs in need, some people
want to donate but often run into difficulties in the application
process, " said Li, adding a specific law should be enacted to
standardize the application and transplant process."
China is faced with a huge
gap between the patients who need functional organs and limited
donations. About 1.5 million patients need organ transplant each
year, but only 10,000 can find organs for transplant, according to
statistics from the Ministry of Health.
Most organs were donated by ordinary citizens upon
their death after the voluntary signing of donation agreements. It
is strictly prohibited in China for illegal organ transplant, said
Huang Jiefu, China's vice health minister.
Experts believe that the concept of dead-brain
declaration will greatly promote organ transplant.
However, Chinese people's traditional view of "living
till the last breath" has restrained living human organ supply,
said NPC deputy Chen Haixiao, head of Taizhou Hospital in China's
eastern Zhejiang Province.
"Social customs are a big reason," said Chen,
explaining that many Chinese are unwilling to donate organs because
they consider the stop of breath and heartbeat the standard of
death.
He suggested the law allow doctors to declare people
brain dead so their organs can be used to save the lives of people
suffering the prostration of an organ.
"It will benefit many patients if the public can take
the donation as a charity," said Chen.
Actually, the Ministry of Health in 2006 drafted a set
of regulations on human organ transplant to the State Council for
revision and improvement.
(Xinhua News Agency March 9, 2007)
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