Today’s decision on presumed consent will allow the NHS to focus on improvements needed for patients waiting for transplant now, according to the British Liver Trust.
Chief Executive Alison Rogers welcomed the recommendations of the Organ Donation Taskforce on the potential impact of an opt-out system for organ donation: “Changing the law would be a distraction from the measures that could help patients now. It would take a number of years to take forward, time that patients on the waiting list just don’t have.
“Liver patients in particular need urgent action to boost the number of organs for transplant, as there is no dialysis for liver disease. We want a clear focus on the practical measures that will help more patients benefit from transplants, including more donor co-ordinators, an increase in trained retrieval teams and a major publicity campaign to inform the public and promote the donor register.
“It is 10 months since recommendations were accepted by the Government on how to increase donation rates. We want to see faster progress in implementing these. For example, training of all staff involved in the treatment of potential organ donors should be mandatory and regularly updated. This has been marked as an ‘aspiration’ with no date set for completion.
“Gaining the consent of healthy people, the dying and their families is difficult and sensitive, and takes time and effort by appropriately trained doctors and nurses. But patients value the selfless gift of a donated organ and there is no shortcut to achieving this.”
Earlier this year, the Organ Donation Taskforce proposed a package of measures which they believe could improve the number of organs available by 50% within five years. These include appointing a donation champion in every hospital, more transplant co-ordinators and making hospitals report a league table of donation rates.
The shortage of donors and complexity of the operation means that for every one person given a second chance at life with a transplant, 10 die from liver disease. Over 100 people die every year waiting for a liver transplant. In contrast to kidney disease, there is no dialysis for people with liver disease. Tragically, some patients on the waiting list become too ill to survive the operation. If more organs were available, clinicians would be able to offer the benefits of a new organ to many more patients who at the moment do not even reach the waiting list.
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For further information please contact: Imogen Shillito or Sonia Aarons Phone: 01425 481 320 Out of hours: 07939 960 420 Email: Imogen.shillito@britishlivertrust.org.uk Web: www.britishlivertrust.org.uk
British Liver Trust, 2 Southampton Road, Ringwood, BH24 1HY
Editor’s Note: 1. The British Liver Trust is Britain’s only national liver disease charity for adults. We work to improve the lives of people suffering from liver disease with key roles in education, support and research.
2. Liver disease is one of the UK’s five ‘big killers’ and the only one on the rise. The Trust is working urgently to encourage prevention and investment in treatment and care for people with liver disease. Much of the increasing incidence of liver disease stems from lifestyle trends – relating to alcohol, obesity and viral hepatitis. However, liver disease has many other causes including genetics, abnormalities in the immune system and even the medicines we take. The Trust is working to raise awareness about the liver and combat the stigma associated with liver disease.
3. The Organ Donation Taskforce’s report on presumed consent published on 17 November 2008 is available here
4. The British Liver Trust supports the Taskforce’s recommendations made in January 2008 to increase the number of organs from consenting donors by 50% (which are available via this link including: • Mandatory training for clinical staff likely to be involved in treatment of potential organ donors. • Recruitment of more specialist transplant co-ordinators and work to ensure they are supporting all NHS Trusts. • Work to make organ donation a usual, not an unusual event, and a routine discussion as part of end-of-life care with health professionals. Each NHS Trust to have a clinical donation champion and structures to support this. • Creation of a UK-wide Donation Ethics Group to examine and advise professionals on the legal, ethical and professional issues around transplants and to support clear and objective decision-making within an ethical framework. • Donation activity in each Trust should be monitored and reported to the healthcare regulators. A donation champion should be appointed in every Trust. • Creation of a UK-wide Organ Donation Organisation to ensure that all NHS organisations and health professionals are working to support organ supply across the UK. In addition, we support campaigns to encourage people to join the Organ Donor Register and discuss this step with their families. This register now has legal force as consent in England.
5. The Department of Health’s Organ Donation Taskforce Programme Delivery Board set out timings for delivery of the Taskforce’s recommendations in a paper available on this site
6. The Trust provides a comprehensive website www.britishlivertrust.org.uk, free medical helpline – 0800 652 7330, and distributes a wide range of information leaflets to individuals and healthcare professionals. In addition, the Trust is a contact point for support groups nationwide, as well as coordinating funding and providing support for research. |