Global Times

Lawmaker suggests including organ donation rate in civilized city evaluation

- By Zhao Yusha

To tackle China’s low rate of organ donation, a lawmaker suggested including organ donation rate in the criteria for determinin­g a civilized city, meaning a city’s organ donation rate must surpass the previous year’s national average to meet the standard.

The proposal was brought by Chen Jingyu, a cardiothor­acic surgery expert and vice president of Wuxi People’s Hospital in East China’s Jiangsu Province, and also a deputy of the 13th National People’s Congress ( NPC).

He told the Global Times that China’s organ donation rate is already top among Asian countries, with around five out of one million people willing to donate their organs after death.

However, the rate is still low considerin­g the huge demand for organs in China, according to Chen, pointing out that there are 300,000 people who are in need of organs, of whom only about 20,000 will be lucky enough to get them.

The evaluation of a civilized city states that residents’ satisfacti­on for organ donation has to be more than 50 percent. However, Chen said it is hard to quantify such feelings, and suggested including the organ donation rate into the criteria for evaluating if a city is civilized enough.

He believed the benchmark for a civilized city candidate is for it to surpass the previous year’s national average rate of organ donations.

Taking 2019 as an example, 5,818 people donated their organs after death, which resulted in 19,454 organ transplant­ation surgeries. This has helped elevate organ donors per million people ( pmp) in China from 2.01 in 2015 to 4.16 in 2019.

In addition, Chen said that if the proposal is adopted, China’s national influence will be further elevated and will serve as a strong rebuttal to internatio­nal smearing of China’s organ donation sector.

A total of 24,112 Chinese donors donated their organs after death from January 2015 to December 2019, according to a report from the China Organ Transplant­ation Developmen­t Foundation issued in December last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China