Daily Dispatch

Demystifyi­ng organ donation

Wider consent could save more lives

- By SIYA BOYA

IN A move meant to dismiss myths and increase awareness about organ donations, the Organ Donor Foundation is embarking on a campaign to educate previously disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

The non-profit charity which aims to address the critical shortage of organ and tissue donors in South Africa through regular awareness and education campaigns will soon roll out its Uluntu Project to disadvanta­ged communitie­s – starting with Gugulethu and Khayelitsh­a township in Cape Town.

It will then be taken to other parts of the country.

Communicat­ions director Jooste Vermeulen said they were in the preliminar­y stages of the project.

The project will be to ensure that when people come across organ donor forms in hospitals, they are not caught off-guard, Vermeulen said.

“Some people decide they want to consult with their families, pastors or even traditiona­l healers before making the decision and often time is not on their side,” he said.

Some of the things communitie­s will be educated about include the following:

The body of one person can save seven people if the life saving organs are harvested;

Skin can also be donated, but it is the outermost top layer that is taken and the flesh will not be left exposed; and

Tissue and bone marrow donations can help up to 50 people.

According to Vermeulen, there are about 4 500 South Africans waiting for life saving organs while only 300 transplant­s are done annually on average.

“We have the hospitals, knowledge, infrastruc­ture and all the capacity to do more and we are leading the rest of Africa but we can do more.

“Donors must discuss their intentions with their next of kin because even if one is on the donor’s list and the family does not agree the donations will not happen because the deceased cannot speak for themselves, so families must always know your wishes,” he added.

Organ donation is still something rarely talked about in black families with some believing that their loved ones should be buried with all their organs intact.

However, over the years, organ donation has made some inroads with traditiona­lists and religious leaders throwing their weight behind it.

Inkolo Kantu spokesman Loyiso Nqevu said: “We can see people’s lives are being saved and we have nothing against it.”

Pieter de Heer, an elder at Jehovah’s Witnesses said contrary to popular belief, they have nothing against organ donation. — siyab@dispatch.

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES ?? SAVING A LIFE: Doctors at the Panorama Medi Clinic in Cape Town perform a revolution­ary heart valve operation
Picture: GALLO IMAGES SAVING A LIFE: Doctors at the Panorama Medi Clinic in Cape Town perform a revolution­ary heart valve operation

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