Views on organ donation: living donors
The living donors we interviewed were healthy people who chose to donate a kidney to help a seriously ill person have a better quality of...
Some of the people we spoke to noted how one donor could save the lives of several patients and also that many transplant patients now live much longer than in the past. Several people mentioned that, while people may be in favour of organ donation, few actually get around to registering. They were keen to raise awareness of organ donation and some had been interviewed on TV, radio and for newspapers. Several had set up their own websites. Many of those we talked to felt it was important for schools to teach children about organ donation as they were ‘the organ donors of the future’.
Deepak and Hardev urged people across religious boundaries to think about organ donation. Deepak said clerics of all denominations had failed to find anything in the scriptures that opposed it, and encouraged others to find out more for themselves.
Some of the people we talked to praised the organ donation system in Spain, a very successful system, because many people there consented to organ donation on the death of a relative. Recipients also discussed the presumed consent organ donation scheme, where organs are taken unless the donor has specifically opted out in writing. They felt this could increase donation rates, and research suggests it could do by up to 25 per cent. In the current ‘opt-in’ system of organ donation in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland individuals are asked to register their willingness to be a donor after their death.
The living donors we interviewed were healthy people who chose to donate a kidney to help a seriously ill person have a better quality of...