Cadaver organ transplant project gets a new life
After several months of inactivity, there has been some progress in the government’s Jeevandan programme (cadaver organ transplantation project). A Jeevandan office is to be set up in the directorate of medical education (DME) and a chief transplant coordinator appointed.
Currently, only the Osmania General Hospital conducts one or two kidney transplants per month from live donors. Accord-ing to NGOs, thousands are on the wait list and many more requiring tra-nsplants are not even registered as no central onl-ine registry is maintained.
Ms Lalitha Raghuram from Mohan Foundation said, “At least 600 people awaiting kidney transplants have registered with the transplant centres. More than a hundred are awaiting a liver transplant. There are thousands of other patients in the state who require some kind of transplant, but aren’t registered.”
Directorate of medical education and chairman of the Jeevandan project Dr Vasant Prasad said their meeting with 25 nephrologists had been fruitful. In addition to the decision to have an office and a chief transplant coordinator, other staff appointments would be made as well. “The project will become a reality very soon,” Dr Prasad said.
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