Indian Journal of Transplantation (Jan 2023)
Towards deceased organ donation in Haryana, India: Mapping awareness, perceptions, and implementation challenges amongst the medical community
Abstract
Introduction: The Transplantation of Human Organs Act (THOA) provided legal status to brain death as a form of death in 1994. However, even after three decades, the deceased organ donation rate in India stands at a mere 0.52 per million population, crucially due to a lack of brain death awareness, and an absence of institutionalized protocols for deceased donations. Objectives: By taking the case of the state of Haryana, this article seeks to understand the existing state of brain death awareness among professionals working in the medical community, and identify the implementation challenges that would be involved in instituting a state-level policy for donations from deceased persons. Materials and Methods: This paper adopts a qualitative approach, utilizing in-depth interviews with doctors in the districts of Rohtak and Charkhi Dadri in Haryana, and transplant coordinators across the state to gather a nuanced understanding of the issue. Results: The research finds that brain death awareness is lacking among doctors, along with the necessary resources for brain death declarations to become practice. There is also an evident district-wise variation in the responses of doctors when it comes to the potential challenges of instituting a brain death declaration standard operating procedure. It offers recommendations for improved implementation of organ transplant policies and scaling up of deceased donations. Conclusion: To unearth the potential that deceased organ donation holds, some immediate measures that can be taken include mapping all the functional organ retrieval facilities across the state and their closest civil hospitals or postgraduate medical institutions with trauma centres, and focusing on the sensitization of the medical functionaries with respect to brain death and its identification.
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