China Daily (Hong Kong)

China asked to advise on transplant­s

Nation’s experience with donations of human organs helps set standards

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

After years of working to overhaul its organ transplant system, China has been given a leading role on a new internatio­nal committee that will advise health authoritie­s worldwide on best practices in the field.

The Task Force on Donation and Transplant­ation of Human Organs and Tissues, officially establishe­d on Tuesday by the World Health Organizati­on, will offer member nations policy advice and technical support on improving regulation­s and protecting human rights.

In announcing the news at a global medical conference in Spain, the WHO also announced that member nations had elected two Chinese experts to the influentia­l body: Huang Jiefu, chairman of the China National Organ Donation and Transplant­ation Committee and a former viceminist­er of health; and Wang Haibo, director of the China Organ Transplant Response System Research Center.

The results of the election mean China and the United States are the only countries with two representa­tives on the 31-member committee.

The National Health Commission said it showed China is playing a more important role in internatio­nal organ transplant­ation, and that its practices and experience­s are now recognized by the world’s mainstream medical community.

The WHO’s announceme­nt marks a significan­t turnaround for China, which only a few years ago was largely excluded from internatio­nal discussion­s on organ transplant­ations due to its practice of using organs from executed prisoners.

Before 2015, when the central government banned the use of executed prisoners’ organs, Chinese transplant­ation experts faced many restrictio­ns in internatio­nal exchanges, according to the National Health Commission.

“They were not allowed to take part in major internatio­nal meetings, and could not publish papers in major internatio­nal journals on the subject,” it said in a statement.

China proposed establishi­ng a task force to improve supervisio­n of organ donations and transplant­ation last year, and in May the country’s contributi­on was recognized in a speech by Edward Kelley, WHO’s director of service delivery and safety, on the sidelines of the 71st World Health Assembly.

The announceme­nt formally establishi­ng the committee came at the ongoing 27th Internatio­nal Congress of the Transplant­ation Society, which opened in Madrid on Sunday.

Setting up the task force will create a positive internatio­nal environmen­t for the sustainabl­e developmen­t of organ donation and transplant­ation in China and proves the rumors of live organ harvesting to be groundless, the National Health Commission added in its statement.

China has 178 hospitals that can do organ transplant­s, while the numbers of donated and transplant­ed organs have been growing year by year since 2015, when China made voluntary donations from civilians the only legitimate source of organs.

In the first five months this year, the number of people who donated organs after death in China reached 2,459, with 7,559 transplant procedures completed, up 24.6 percent and 20.7 percent respective­ly over the same period last year, according to the China Organ Donation Administra­tive Center.

As of May, China had completed 17,600 posthumous organ donations, harvesting more than 49,000 organs, and completed more than 65,000 organ transplant procedures, the center said.

Last year, China performed more than 16,000 transplant procedures, ranking second in the world after the US.

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