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Only 2.5% of Indian patients in need of liver transplants actually get them

Only 2.5% of Indian patients in need of liver transplants actually get them

Written by Admin |Updated : February 13, 2014 10:58 AM IST

liver transplantWe've told you how and whyliver is important for us. When liver disease cannot be treated with medical means, surgery with a liver transplant is an option. However, India is facing a big donor crunch in liver transplants - of the nearly 20,000 needy patients, only 500 are able to get them according to statistics available. Lack of awareness is a big issue here.

"India needs to get fresh statistics on the demand-supply ratio for liver transplants," Subhash Gupta, senior consultant for liver transplant and gastrosurgery at Apollo hospital said at the 22nd annual conference of the Indian Society of Organ Transplantation (ISOT) in the capital. "In the West, liver transplantation is (necessitated) by obesity rather than alcohol (abuse)," Gupta said. "India is still seeing a mixed situation where the factors are preventive."

The Transplantation of Human Organs (Amendment) Bill, approved by the Lok Sabha in August this year, brought stringent measures to check illegal trade of human organs and stop exploitation of the poor."The amendment will surely help India, where there a huge gap between demand and supply in the transplant sector," said Sandeep Guleria, organising secretary of ISOT. "It will encourage cadaveric organ donation also where family members need intense counselling for donating organs from a brain-dead person," he added.

Specialist doctors and the number of health care centres in the country remain low as even Delhi has just one public hospital that specialises in liver transplantation. The surgery costs around Rs.15 lakh.

Source:IANS