$4 Million for Organ Donor Doctors - But Will it Work?
Press Release
Andy
Tookey
GiveLife NZ - Campaign for an Effective
Organ Donation System
8 June
2012
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$4 Million for Organ Donor Doctors - But Will it
Work?
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Minister of Health, Tony Ryall has announced that $4 Million will go towards organ donor initiatives.
As all the funding is going only into the medical side is he putting all his eggs in one basket?
I am all for more money being invested if it raises significantly the rate of organ donors which in turn saves many more lives.
The paired "mix and match" donor scheme which matches donors and recipients is a great advance.
In my petition to Parliament to improve the organ donor system I pushed for such a scheme.
That was ten years ago.
The money being provided is not actually to implement the scheme. It is a feasibility study only. I wonder how many lives would have been saved if it
was introduced ten years ago as I had asked for? How much longer after various studies are completed before it will be implemented?
As for deceased donors, $1
million dollars will be going towards ICU staff to identify
potential donors.
As organ donors only come from
Intensive Care Units one would have thought that this would
have been compulsory training for ICU staff in the first
place.
It always should have been a mandatory part of
their training. To start this initiative now, ten years
after I highlighted the failings of our organ donation
system is scandalous.
Will them identifying potential donors increase the actual number of donors?
International research, including research recently conducted in Australia shows that up to 50% of families say no to the donation of organs of their loved ones.
As
well as looking for potential donors there may be more 'bang
for your buck' if you target the 50% who say no.
Public
awareness and education may help prior to a major
catastrophe facing the family.
Prior knowledge of organ
donation and the known wishes of the deceased is surely much
better than telling someone that their loved one has just
died suddenly in an accident, 'and by the way can we have
their organs?'
An incentive may help as well. I
believe that organ donors funerals should be paid for by the
government.
More people would give more consideration to
being an organ donor if they thought it would take the
financial burden off their family at an already traumatic
time.
It would not be a payment for organs but a 'token of appreciation' for the saving of many lives. It may even raise the donor rate .
Around 6000 people a
year get a funeral grant either through WINZ or ACC.
Yet
oddly enough even though donors contribute hugely to the
community and save the government heaps by getting others
off expensive medical treatments, they are not eligible for
a funeral grant.
In response to my Parliamentary
Petition the Organ Donor Service argued that if they had
more money they could increase the organ donor rate by 15%.
They got what they asked for, including a total
rebranding, half a million dollars up front, a doubling of
funding and a doubling of staff.
The following year the donor rate plummeted to an all time record low of just 28 donors.
A few year ago National MP Jackie Blue
introduced a Private Members Bill that would provide for a
legally binding organ donor register.
This time the
Organ Donor Service suggested that there is no need for one,
as due to lesser head injuries and better medical
interventions there are 'just no more donors.'
It's interesting that once again we have come full circle and that there 'ARE' more donors, it's just that we need more money to identify them (again.)
I
would like to see some of the money invested in non medical
initiatives such as funeral grants, and even more radical
concepts such as an 'opt out' donor register as
opposed to our current 'opt in' system.
Maybe a
revisit of the Binding Donor Register, or move over to the
controversial but successful Israel system of donors getting
priority over non donors if both need a transplant.
Such
a scheme is advocated for in New Zealand by LifeSharers
(http://www.lifesharers.org.nz)
Some measures may
not by palatable to some people. Their views may change
dramatically if they find that themselves or one of their
family needs an organ to survive.
Only around 52% of
drivers have 'donor' on their driving licence. What
percentage of drivers though would accept an organ if they
needed one to live?
Remember, with no organ donors there
are no recipients either.
If any government is
serious about saving lives they need to consider more
radical options.
Either way there needs to be an urgent
serious debate otherwise we will remain amongst the lowest
in the world for our organ donor rate.