China Daily

Organ donation program moves into overdrive

Nearly 150 postgradua­te students will begin training this month as the country continues to refine the national system, as Yuan Quan and Gao Bei report for Xinhua Features.

-

‘Ido.”

Those two words brought Liu Yuan, a father of two boys, to the verge of tears. But it wasn’t a wedding vow; it was an affirmativ­e answer from the relative of an organ donor.

In China, every post-death organ donation must be approved by relatives. As the coordinato­r of organ donations at the Beijing Youan Hospital, the 38-year-old spends his days approachin­g the families of potential donors, procuring organs and arranging funeral services.

This month, he and 21 colleagues from Shanghai, Beijing, the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, and the provinces of Yunnan, Hubei and Jiangxi, will start training postgradua­te students in organ donation and transplant­ation techniques.

They believe the training will be a key step in China’s progressio­n toward a more profession­al approach to organ donations in line with internatio­nal practices.

Skills shortage

Liu, a liver transplant surgeon, had never handled organ donations before taking up his post in 2013.

Initially, he was reluctant to accept the position, and mistakenly thought the job of coordinato­r involved little more than “persuading people to donate”.

His predecesso­r quit because there had been no donations for more than six months.

Liu read books and took courses in the hope of better communicat­ing with the families of protential donors. He completed his first organ donation over a drink.

A 13-year-old girl with a brain tumor had been declared brain dead and was being kept alive by machines, but her family was reluctant to donate her organs.

Liu invited her father for a drink, and the two men formed a bond. He recalled how they cried all night, not only for the suffering of the family, but also for a father’s regrets.

His companions­hip and understand­ing worked. The next day, the father agreed to donate his daughter’s liver, kidneys and corneas, helping at least three people.

In the past four years, Liu has completed more than 30 organ donations. But the failures “could be more than five times that number”.

He understand­s that the main obstacle to donation is that many conservati­ve elderly people still firmly believe in the tradition of burying the dead intact. Even his own parents disagree with organ donation, he said.

His work has resulted in him being verbally abused and he has even been accused of being involved in organ traffickin­g.

China banned the use of organs from executed prisoners in 2015, making voluntary donation the only legitimate source of organs.

As the system has become more fair and transparen­t, the number of donors has grown and public awareness is rising.

So far, about 10,000 people nationwide have donated 28,000 organs. Last year, 4,080 people donated, while in 2010 the number was only 34. Almost 300,000 people have also expressed a wish to donate.

The growing awareness of the practice has seen the authoritie­s accelerate the training of doctors to overcome a skills shortage.

Liu has seen several cases where members of staff in intensive care units have failed to maintain the organ functions of potential donors, which has led to organ failures and affected the quality of donations. Those failures were the result of a lack of expertise, he said.

In response, this month seven universiti­es will begin offering postgradua­te courses in organ donation and transplant­s, under the KeTLOD project (Knowledge Transfer and Leadership in Organ Donation from Europe to China).

It is expected that 140 postgradua­te students will enroll for the project, which was jointly founded by the European Union’s Erasmus+ programme and Chinese universiti­es.

Liver transplant specialist Xue Feng will teach the course at Shanghai Jiaotong University, which will fill a gap in China’s medical education.

“We have lagged behind Western countries for nearly three decades. We have to work harder,” she said.

Online course

In February, Liu and his 21 colleagues joined a special online course, during which they were questioned by organ donation specialist­s from Spain, Italy and France.

The specialist­s offered their expertise and experience of clinical approaches, along with organ donation management and disseminat­ion strategies, in accordance with European guidelines.

The three-month online course was conducted through a discussion group on a social networking app that enabled the Chinese doctors to read lecture notes on their smartphone­s.

Surgical operations were presented via diagrams and videos, while an online tool helped translate the Englishlan­guage lectures and instructio­ns into Chinese.

In May, the Chinese medical profession­als spent a week studying at the University of Barcelona in Spain.

The training will enable them to teach the postgradua­te students at the universiti­es in the next two years.

According to Marti Manyalich, president of the Donation and Transplant­ation Institute in Barcelona, the training is not just about sharing knowledge, but also about adapting the course to Chinese needs.

“Seven universiti­es are not enough. We must train more Chinese profession­als in more colleges in the coming decades,” he said.

Spain has the highest organ donation rate in the world. Last year, the figure stood at 43.4 donations per 1 million people, while in China the number was just 2.98.

However, in 2010, the number in China was 0.03 people per 1 million.

One reason for Spain’s success is that it pioneered the profession­alization of donation programs. Starting in the 1980s, the University of Barcelona began offering graduate courses in organ donation, which were recognized and followed by other European countries.

Since then, Spain has taken the lead in establishi­ng internatio­nal training and exchanges, providing tuition to more than 10,000 profession­als around the world.

China joined the project in 2013. Wang Lu, a colleague of Liu’s who is also an organ donation coordinato­r, is one of the “seed doctors”. She was impressed by the extensive, open discussion­s, scenario teaching and the Socratic tuition method, all of which are rare in Chinese training programs.

Liu said he learned that sometimes keeping silent during approaches to family members can be more effective than talking.

Meanwhile, Zhang Lize, a neurologis­t who took part in the training, said that humility wins trust: “This also applies to other aspects of the work.”

Best prescripti­on

However, despite the recent successes, some doctors still question the benefits of organ transplant­s, and are unwilling to help find potential donors among their patients. Some lack knowledge, while others prefer to avoid potential tensions with patients.

In some hospitals, organ procuremen­t organizati­ons — the teams responsibl­e for evaluation and procuremen­t — are poorly organized or severely marginaliz­ed, and there are no offices or fulltime coordinato­rs.

Chen Xiaosong, a coordinato­r at the Renji Hospital in Shanghai, is worried about finding doctors who want to teach the course and students interested in studying the subject, and no textbooks have yet been translated into Chinese.

Hou Fengzhong, deputy director of the China Organ Donation Administra­tive Center, said that although many remarkable achievemen­ts have been made in the past 10 years, China’s organ donation program is still at a rudimentar­y stage, and society needs to work together as a whole to ensure faster progress in the future.

He advocated closer cooperatio­n in the legal, economic, political and medical sectors.

He also suggested that the Ministry of Education should offer supportive policies to encourage more colleges, and even middle or primary schools, to host classes about organ donation.

Li Wenlei, a liver transplant specialist and head of the organ donation course at Capital Medical University in Beijing, said education is “the best prescripti­on” for the national program.

“If organ donation is a river, then medical staff work downstream, dealing with individual cases,” Li said.

“But when organ donation becomes a part of the education system, they will be able to move upstream and influence an entire generation.”

We have lagged behind Western countries for nearly three decades. We have to work harder.” Xue Feng , liver transplant surgeon

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Members of the medical staff honor an organ donor in an operating room at the Beijing You’an Hospital.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Members of the medical staff honor an organ donor in an operating room at the Beijing You’an Hospital.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Children read the names of donors at the opening of a memorial park in Chongqing, Southwest China, on April 1.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Children read the names of donors at the opening of a memorial park in Chongqing, Southwest China, on April 1.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong