综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Draft rules on transplants ready
(eastday)
Updated: 2005-06-29 09:19

In order to regulate China's medical practice on organ transplants and protect patients' rights, it is urgent to pass legislation on brain death, transplants, organ donation and living organ donation between relatives, experts told a medical forum in the city of Shanghai yesterday.

Domestic hospitals have evaluated about 40 cases of brain death, since the Ministry of Health issued draft guidelines in 2003. Of those cases, the families of only five patients expressed a wish to donate organs.

"The guideline on brain death will set criteria to judge whether a patient is brain dead or not. The purpose is not to collect organs, but to regulate medical practices and avoid errors," said Dr Yuan Jin from Wuhan-based Tongji Hospital. "Even many Western countries with brain death laws still suffer an organ shortage."

Experts said the central government is expected to pass an organ transplant law in the near future. The ministry has finished a draft that includes definitions of both brain death and heart death.

"The organs are still useful when a patient is judged brain dead," Yuan said. "Organs can be harvested for transplants up to 10 minutes after brain death. It is meaningless to conduct organ donation or transplants after 10 minutes."

Experts said an effective solution to organ shortages is donation between relatives.

Dr Zhu Tongyu, director of urology at Shanghai's Zhongshan Hospital, said several things need to be done.

"Organ management in China is lagging behind," Zhu said. "Every hospital has a waiting list. In the West, nationwide waiting lists monitor the distribution of organs."

"Sometimes organs are wasted here because we don't have a national list of patients needing organs," the doctor added.

He said donation between relatives is the best method to solve the shortage. An average of more than 60 percent of organs come from patients' relatives in the West. It's only 4 percent in China.

In addition to the risk of such transplants, the present medical insurance system has also set barriers to living donors.

"The system doesn't cover the medical expense of the donor, who also undergoes surgery," Zhu said. "The cost is at least 10,000 yuan (US$1,205) per donor."



Demi Moore: conquer aging with baby
Lin Chih-ling injured in horse fall
Jolie adopts Ethiopian AIDS orphan
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Taiwan's KMT Party to elect new leader Saturday

 

   
 

'No trouble brewing,' beer industry insists

 

   
 

Critics see security threat in Unocal bid

 

   
 

DPRK: Nuke-free peninsula our goal

 

   
 

Workplace death toll set to soar in China

 

   
 

No foreign controlling stakes in steel firms

 

   
  A novel without a word telling a love story?
   
  108 Chinese grassroots women in race for Nobel
   
  Mainland celebrities' ID card photos exposed online
   
  An honesty crisis has hit Chinese fledglings
   
  Distorted textbooks applied to Japanese students
   
  Granny grows tired of prostitution at age 63
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Brain-death draft law stirs up controversy
  Feature  
  1/3 Chinese youth condone premarital sex  
Advertisement
         
万山特区| 容城县| 仙居县| 阿尔山市| 洛阳市| 西和县| 蒲城县| 航空| 华池县| 驻马店市| 中牟县| 恩平市| 石嘴山市| 慈溪市| 绥江县| 临猗县| 海阳市| 内黄县| 禹城市| 桓台县| 九龙坡区| 宁蒗| 古田县| 简阳市| 阳朔县| 崇州市| 淅川县| 崇阳县| 万安县| 故城县| 冕宁县| 广汉市| 定远县| 台湾省| 田林县| 成安县| 怀来县| 九台市| 临高县| 明溪县| 北京市|