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ORGAN DONATION IN INDIA.
In 1994, the Government of India passed the Transplantation of Human Organs Act
that legalized the concept of brain death and, for the first time, facilitated organ
procurement from heart beating, brain dead donors. However, this concept has not
caught on well in India for want of public education and awareness. This in turn
is perpetuating the commercial sale of human organs due to the widening gap between
the demand and supply. Thousands of lives are lost in India annually from heart
and liver failure since transplantation of unpaired organs like heart, liver and
pancreas is either difficult or impossible from living donors. This is only possible
on a large scale if these organs are available from cadaver donors.
In the United States, in 2004, there were over 14,000 organ donors - an increase
of 695 donors (7%) over 2003. During this time the number of cadaver donors grew
by 11% to 7,152, the largest annual increase in deceased donors in the last 10 years.
In 2005, the number of kidneys transplanted from cadavers was 9,914, while the number
of patients who received transplants from living donors was 6,563.
By.
Pooja Jain.
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