10
Opportunities for Action
The recommendations provided in this report set forth a number of actions that the committee believes can have a positive impact on organ donation (Table 10-1). Together, these recommendations identify a set of actions that in isolation might have only limited results but that in concert should strengthen ongoing efforts and open up new opportunities to increase the supply of transplantable organs, thereby saving the lives and improving the quality of life of many individuals.
The committee believes that it is possible to increase the opportunities for organ donation in the two populations of deceased donors: individuals whose deaths have been determined by neurologic criteria and individuals whose deaths have been determined by circulatory criteria. It has been estimated that each year organs are recoverable from approximately 10,500 to 16,800 individuals whose deaths are determined by neurologic criteria. Currently, however, approximately only half of these individuals become organ donors. Nevertheless, more and more organ procurement organizations and hospitals are increasing their donation rates and some are approaching or are achieving 75 percent conversion rates. Increased quality improvement, organ donor registration, education, and research efforts have the potential to sustain these increases and to realize similar increases in other institutions.
Additionally, the committee estimates that each year in the United States organs are potentially recoverable from 22,000 individuals whose deaths are determined by circulatory criteria. This population of potential donors is only beginning to be recognized. In 2004, there were 391 dona-
TABLE 10-1 Actions to Increase Organ Donation
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Families |
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Healthcare, emergency care, and transplantation systems |
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Nonprofit organizations, academia, government, media, employers |
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tions after circulatory determination of death (DCDD). Although the committee recognizes the challenges in developing and implementing DCDD programs, the opportunity to save lives necessitates a careful effort to fully explore the recovery of organs after the circulatory determination of death.
It is the committee’s hope that this report will contribute to the development and implementation of new efforts to increase the rates of organ donation. In addition, the committee hopes that these efforts, along with concurrent actions focused on the prevention of health conditions that lead to the need for transplantation and research to explore alternatives to transplantation, will significantly reduce the size of the organ transplant waiting list in the near future.