Independent Report Published On Organ Allocation System For Non-UK Residents

Main Category: Transplants / Organ Donations
Article Date: 04 Aug 2009 - 5:00 PDT

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An independent report to clarify the rules on organ transplants for NHS patients and non-UK EU residents was published today by Elisabeth Buggins, former Chair of the Organ Donation Taskforce.

The report was commissioned by the Health Secretary earlier this year (11 March) following concerns about the number of organs from deceased UK donors being transplanted into non-UK resident EU nationals each year. The report's recommendations, which have been broadly accepted by the Department of Health, will help to ensure public confidence in the fairness and transparency of the organ allocation system.

Immediate steps will now be taken to implement the report's recommendations including: Health Minister Ann Keen said:

"I am grateful to Elisabeth Buggins for her work on this important issue. We accept her recommendations and will now take these forward to ensure a UK system that is fair and transparent and one which patients and potential donors can have trust and confidence in.

"The report highlights the complexity of European law in this area and we will take immediate action to provide guidance for the transplant community and reassure the public of the integrity of our transplant programme.

"Organ donation is one of medicine's great success stories, transforming thousands of people's lives each year. We want as many people as possible who need new organs to have that life saving or life enhancing organ transplant. In order for this to happen we want to see donor rates rise from the current 800 to 1,400 donors per year by March 2013 and to do this we need more donors to sign up to the organ donor register."

Elisabeth Buggins said:

"This report seeks to make more organs available for UK residents. While I found no evidence of wrongdoing in the way organs are allocated to patients there is a perception that private payments may unfairly influence access to transplant, so they must be banned.

"Confidence in the transplant system should increase once money is removed from the equation, decisions are transparent and accountability clear; confidence we know is necessary if the number of organ donors is to rise to match the best in Europe. I would encourage everyone to join the organ donor register; a promise that is quick to make and of such lasting benefit to others."

Source
Department of Health

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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