Leek Post & Times

‘It’s more important than ever for people to share their organ donor decision with their family’

NHS Blood and Transplant says donations are recovering, but more than 4,600 patients are still waiting for a kidney transplant

-

TO MARK World Kidney Day, NHS Blood and Transplant is calling on everyone in Staffordsh­ire to share their organ donation decision, and consider making a living kidney donation.

The call comes as more than 4,600 people wait for a kidney transplant, with this figure expected to rise.

These have been the hardest hit area of organ transplant­ation throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, with deceased donor transplant­s down 22 per cent and living donor transplant­s down 60 per cent.

This represents an overall drop in kidney transplant­s of 32 per cent in 2020/21, compared to 2019/20.

This means around 1,100 fewer patients received a kidney transplant in 2020/21, compared to the year before.

In living donor transplant­ation, 422 patients benefited instead of the usual 1,000, and there were 500 fewer deceased donor transplant­s.

Sadly, the thousands of people in need of a kidney transplant may end up waiting longer for a deceased or living donor as they’ve been unable to have a transplant for most of the pandemic, and the waiting list has increased.

Living donor transplant­ation opens up opportunit­ies for patients by minimising the time people need to rely on dialysis and by offering people who wait the longest – those who are most difficult to match – the chance of a successful transplant.

Those who are most difficult to match are particular­ly ‘sensitised’ (which means they have higher levels of antibodies which could cause their body to reject a transplant­ed organ) or are from a Black, Asian or minority ethnic background.

People can donate a kidney in life to a particular individual (a relative, friend or someone they know who is in need of a transplant) or choose to donate anonymousl­y where their kidney will either go to a high priority patient on the transplant list or create a chain of transplant­s via the UK living kidney sharing scheme.

Living donation is not for everyone, and some people are not suitable donors, so the majority of kidney patients will still be saved by a deceased organ donor.

This is why NHS Blood and Transplant insists it is more important than ever to tell your family about your organ donation decision to help those on the waiting list.

Even though the law around organ donation has now changed to an opt out system across England, Wales, and Scotland, many people are still not aware that families will always be consulted before organ donation goes ahead.

Anthony Clarkson, director of Organ and Tissue Donation and Transplant­ation at NHS Blood and Transplant, says: “We know the pandemic is a very worrying time for kidney patients as thousands of people, including patients in Staffordsh­ire, wait for a life-changing kidney transplant.

“We’re pleased that transplant activity is now recovering, and we’re doing everything we can to enable as many transplant­s as possible to take place as quickly as possible.

“Sadly, patients are facing a longer wait and more people need a kidney transplant, so it is more important than ever for people in Staffordsh­ire to share their organ donation decision with their family to help others after their death.

“And if anyone in Staffordsh­ire is willing to consider living kidney donation, they can find out more on our website.”

For more informatio­n, or to register your organ donation decision, visit: www.organdonat­ion.nhs.uk or call 0300 123 23 23.

NHS app users can also use the service to record, check or update their organ donation decision.

 ?? ?? To mark World Kidney Day, people are being urged to consider a living kidney donation and to share their organ donor stories.
To mark World Kidney Day, people are being urged to consider a living kidney donation and to share their organ donor stories.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom