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India to have one-stop shop for organs

National Bio-material Centre to provide fresh organs for transplant

NEW DELHI: In a bid to fill up the gap between the demand and supply of human organs for transplantation, India is all set to have a National Bio-material Centre that will contain bones, fresh human amniotic membrane, cadaveric joints like knees, hips and shoulders, cranium bone graft, loose bone fragments, skin grafts, cornea, heart valves and vessels.

While, the process of setting up a National level Bio-material center has already been initiated in Delhi, five state level bio-material centers (tissue banks) are also in the anvil. The ministry has approached Maharashtra, West Bengal, Assam and Tamil Nadu to submit plans for setting up state level bio-material centers.

At present the Organ Retrieval Banking Organ-isation (ORBO) at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Delhi acts as the nodal centre for the purpose of encouraging organ donations, fair and equitable distribution and optimum utilisation of human organs. It maintains the waiting list of terminally ill patients requiring transplants, donor registration, matching of recipients with donor, coor-dination from procurem-ent of organs to transplantation etc.

However, to make it easy for the people waiting for organ transplantation, the Union health ministry has proposed to set up the bio- material centres.

Experts say that the plan is to connect the centers at the district level so that people do not die waiting for an organ donation.

In India every year 1.5 lakh new patients require kidney transplants, against which only 3,000 transplants are done. Some 6,000 people remain on dialysis, which means limited life span.

“The main thrust and objective of establishing the national level centre is to fill up the gap between ‘demand’ and ‘supply’ of organs for transplantati-ons well as ‘Quality Assurance’ in the availability of various tissues,” an official in the health ministry said.

The Transplantation of Human Organs (Amendm-ent) Act 2011 had included the component of tissue donation and registration of tissue banks, making it imperative under the changed circumstances to establish a National level Tissue Bank to fulfill the demands of tissue transplantation.

( Source : dc )
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