Transplant surgeries could set record
The total number of organ transplant surgeries performed in China is expected to reach 15,000 this year, which would be a record high and an increase of nearly 50 percent over last year.
After the abolishment of procuring organs for transplant from executed
prisoners since the beginning of last year, the number of organs donated after
death has increased rapidly, senior officials and experts said.
Last year, about 10,000 organ transplant surgeries were performed nationwide,
Huang Jiefu, former minister of health and director of the China Organ Donation
and Transplantation Committee, said at the 2016 China International Organ
Donation Conference in Beijing on Oc 17.
The surgery totals include transplants using organs from living donors.
The number of people who donated organs after death in China this year
reached 2,950 by the end of September, which is an increase of 50 percent
compared with the same period last year, said Wang Haibo, director of the China
Organ Transplant Response System, which is responsible for organ distribution
and sharing in China.
This could make China the second in the world, behind the United States, in
the number of organ donors by the end of the year, he said.
Statistics offered by the system also showed the total number of donated
organs harvested after death last year in China exceeded 7,700, more than the
total numbers for 2013 and 2014 combined.
"A new page has been turned" with China's establishment of a transparent
organ donation and transplant system, Huang said.
China stopped using organs from executed prisoners on Jan 1 last year, when
voluntary donations became the only legal source for transplants.
"Much corruption existed in the allocation of organs procured from executed
prisoners," Huang said.
"The Chinese government has adopted a zero-tolerance attitude toward such
behavior," he added.
To improve and better regulate procurement and allocation of organs, the
Organ Procurement and Allocation Committee of the Chinese Hospital Association
was established on Sunday.
The committee will "play a role of management and supervision over the sector
and formulate related standards", Huang said.
Marti Manyalich, president of the International Society of Organ Donation and
Procurement, said China has made great progress in promoting organ donations and
transplants in the past few years.
The ratio of organ donors among Chinese, which is now more than 2 per million population, could increase tenfold in the next 10 years, which means China could nearly meet the demand for organ transplants, he added.
China can make quicker progress in organ donations and transplants by learning from some other countries, such as Spain, which has one of the world's top organ donation ratios, he said.
Like many other countries, China faces a severe shortage of organs, with about 300,000 people waiting for organ transplant surgeries each year, according to Xinhua News Agency.
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