
Syllabus: Issue Related To Health
Context
- Recently, the National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organization (NOTTO) has issued an advisory that prioritizes women patients and relatives of deceased donors in organ transplant allocations.
About Organ Transplant in India
- India performed over 18,900 organ transplants in 2024, ranking third globally in total organ transplants, behind only the United States and China.
- Earlier in 2013, fewer than 5,000 transplants were performed in India.
Legal and Institutional Framework
- India’s transplantation system is governed by the Transplantation of Human Organs and Tissues Act (THOTA), 1994 (amended in 2011), which:
- Legalizes brain-stem death for deceased donation;
- Prohibits commercial organ trade;
- Regulates living and deceased donations;
- Requires authorization for unrelated donors;
- National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organisation (NOTTO): It coordinates organ allocation, maintains a national registry, and promotes awareness.
- National Organ Transplant Programme (NOTP): It establishes the State and Regional Organ Transplant Organisations (SOTTOs and ROTTOs).
- Financial support is provided for infrastructure, training, and immunosuppressant drugs for BPL patients.
- Transplantation of Human Organs Rules, 1995: It defines procedures for donor consent, hospital registration, and composition of Authorization Committees.
Challenges
- Gender Gap in Transplantation: A British Medical Journal analysis found that between 2018–2023, women accounted for 36,038 of 56,509 living organ donations but were recipients in only 17,041 cases.
- Decadal data from NOTTO (2013–2023) revealed that the living Donor Transplants (2023): Women made up 63% of all living donors. However, women comprised only about:
- 24% of heart transplant recipients;
- 47% of lung recipients;
- 37% of kidney recipients;
- 30% of liver recipients;
- 26% of pancreas recipients.
- Decadal data from NOTTO (2013–2023) revealed that the living Donor Transplants (2023): Women made up 63% of all living donors. However, women comprised only about:
- Implementation Challenges: Current organ allocation protocols prioritize recipients solely based on medical urgency, with no provision for gender-based priority.
- Unclear definition of ‘near relatives’ and whether families of cadaveric donors since 1995 are eligible.
- Concerns over possible out-of-turn allotments amid ongoing organ trafficking cases.
- Demand-Supply Gap: Over 100,000 patients need kidney transplants annually, but only around 13,000 are performed.
- Deceased donor rates remain low due to cultural hesitations and lack of awareness.
- Other Concerns:
- Infrastructure Deficiencies: Many government hospitals lack transplant ICUs, operation theatres, and HLA labs. ICU bed shortages hinder brain-dead donor maintenance.
- Human Resource Shortage: Scarcity of trained transplant surgeons, nephrologists, and coordinators. Frequent transfers disrupt continuity in transplant programs.
- Financial Barriers: High cost of lifelong immunosuppressants. Limited post-transplant support beyond the first year.
- Data and Monitoring Gaps: Inconsistent reporting from hospitals. Lack of centralized tracking for donor-recipient outcomes.
- Ethical and Legal Concerns: Instances of organ trafficking and commercial transplants still surface; Inconsistent interpretation of laws across states; Weak enforcement of penalties for violations.
Tamil Nadu: A Model State
- Tamil Nadu’s Cadaver Transplant Programme (CTP), now evolved into TRANSTAN, is a national benchmark. It was the first state to:
- Issue detailed brain death certification guidelines;
- Build equity into organ allocation;
- Establish a swap transplant registry and promote machine perfusion for organ preservation.
Way Forward: Balancing Inclusion and Fairness
- The core challenge lies in ensuring inclusivity without undermining medical fairness. Implementation needs to:
- Be participatory, involving all agencies under the Transplantation of Human Organs Act.
- Maintain medical need as the primary criterion for allocation.
- Safeguard against exploitation while widening access for women and donor families.
| Daily Mains Practice Question [Q] Critically examine the gender disparity in organ transplantation in India. Discuss the steps to address issues of justice and equality, and related challenges . |
Further Reading: 15th Indian Organ Donation Day Ceremony
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