The National - News

Indian doctor to lead new Abu Dhabi unit

▶ Burjeel Medical City’s transplant centre will be the second in the capital as demand grows

- SHIREENA AL NOWAIS

A surgeon who recently performed 12 double-lung transplant­s on patients with endstage Covid-19 will lead a new organ transplant unit in Abu Dhabi.

Burjeel Medical City will carry out heart and lung operations in a partnershi­p with India’s Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences (Kims) Hospitals.

Dr Sandeep Attawar will lead the unit when it opens. It will be the second in the capital.

“In the initial phase, we will be concentrat­ing on setting up the infrastruc­ture for heart and lung transplant­s,” said John Sunil, chief executive of VPS-owned Burjeel Hospitals.

“Soon, we will strengthen our organ transplant centre and open directly to patients in need.

“We aim to provide the most advanced care to patients in the UAE and other GCC countries.”

Burjeel Hospitals did not say when the unit would open.

Dr Attawar, who is currently working in Hyderabad, India, has performed 280 transplant­s. He said there was high demand for transplant services in the UAE and the Gulf.

“I have been contacted quite frequently by patients and their families in the UAE,” Dr Attawar said.

“I currently have patients from Bahrain, Iraq and Dubai who are waiting in my centre in India for a lung transplant.

“Organ donations are looking up in the UAE and this is the right time for us to work together [in Abu Dhabi].

“Amplified, this will do a great deal in not just helping donations but raising awareness and the opportunit­y to getting a transplant.”

Kims, which runs nine hospitals, including one of the largest in India, says its unit has performed more Covid-19 related organ transplant­s than any other in Asia.

Burjeel’s transplant unit is the second such facility in the capital.

Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi has carried out pioneering surgery since 2017, when a legal change allowed organs

In the initial phase, we will be concentrat­ing on setting up the infrastruc­ture for heart and lung transplant­s JOHN SUNIL

Chief executive, Burjeel Hospitals

to be taken from deceased donors.

Before that, operations were restricted to organs taken from living donors – usually a kidney from a close relative.

Three years ago, there were an estimated 6,000 people in the UAE facing primary organ failure, of whom about 4,000 may need a kidney transplant.

The organ transplant donor list system has already saved dozens of lives.

The government is urging residents to sign up as donors, which can be done through the Hayat portal.

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 ?? MediGlobus ?? Dr Sandeep Attawar, one of India’s leading organ transplant surgeons, will lead the new unit at Burjeel
MediGlobus Dr Sandeep Attawar, one of India’s leading organ transplant surgeons, will lead the new unit at Burjeel

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