Organ donation not only saves lives, it makes economic sense. That’s the latest argument from the organisation promoting organ donation in Switzerland, where 1,400 people are on the organ waiting list. (SRF/swissinfo.ch)
For some people an organ donation is their only hope for survival. But compared with other European countries, the Swiss don’t do well. Switzerland has a donor rate of 14.2 donors per million inhabitants. Among neighbouring countries, only Germany has lower rates.
Two years ago the Swiss authorities and Swisstransplant, the foundation promoting organ donation, launched an action plan to train medical staff and better inform the public.
In March over 1,000 patients were waiting for a kidney. Those who can’t get one, have to have their blood purified on dialysis, a treatment that removes all toxic substances from the blood. It takes four hours and patients have three such treatments every week. There are over 80 dialysis units in Switzerland.
Potentially nearly a million francs could be saved per patient when the costs of dialysis and transplants are compared. But that would require more donors. People wanting to become donors fill in a donor card. They then carry it with them at all times.
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Shaw specialises in the ethics of organ donation and transplantation in the Institute for Biomedical Ethics at the University of Basel. He is also a member of Britain’s Donation Ethics Committee, which advises the Department of Health on organ policy. Donor cards alone aren’t enough, Shaw believes. Among other things, he questions why Switzerland doesn’t have…
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The number of people needing organs has been growing steadily over the past decade. Whereas there were 641 people on the waiting list at the end of 2003, the number had reached 1,274 by the end of 2013. The number of deceased organ donors in 2013 was 110, an almost 15% increase over 2012, a…
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