Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Group Wants To Reverse Organ Rules -- Everybody Donates Unless They Opt Out

The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2016 10:47 AM
  • Group Wants To Reverse Organ Rules -- Everybody Donates Unless They Opt Out
WINNIPEG — A group of transplant patients and their families wants the Manitoba government to change the rules so that people don't have to sign up in order to donate their organs after death.
 
Instead, the group wants to switch to a system called "presumed consent," meaning everyone would be considered an organ donor unless they sign up to specifically opt out.
 
The idea is to save more lives by getting more organ donations, with the group called Manitobans for Presumed Consent noting the province has the lowest rates in Canada.
 
Just one per cent of Manitobans have signed up for the online organ donation registry.
 
Spokesman Bryan Dyck says the presumed consent system could increase the donation rate by 25 to 30 per cent, adding that one organ donor can potentially save up to eight lives.
 
Health Minister Sharon Blady has met with the group and applauds their efforts, but says the first step is education.
 
"With a lack on consensus from all of the players, I'm hesitant to move forward," she says. "But I'm always willing to work with folks that want to get the organ donation rate up."
 
One of those lobbying for the change is Allexis Siebrecht, a 12-year-old girl who made headlines last year with her plea for an organ donor as she raced against time in the late stages of liver failure.
 
She eventually got a new liver from a deceased donor, and although she still needs regular checkups, she's living the energetic life of a pre-teen, going tobogganing and rock climbing.
 
"It will help another person get up and start moving again," she says of the presumed consent idea. "They'll get to run around like me."
 
Earlier this year, the government did make some changes in an effort to increase the pool of donors.
 
Before the change, only people declared brain dead with their heart still beating were able to donate. Now, patients whose hearts stop beating and have no chance of recovery can be donors.
 
Last December, the Canadian Institute for Health Information said only 10 per cent of eligible organs from deceased donors were actually transplanted into patients who need them in Manitoba.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Get Kim Kardashian-Type Butt With This New Technique

Get Kim Kardashian-Type Butt With This New Technique
The technique involves taking fat from one area where you have a little too much, and transferring to somewhere you want a little more, reported a Brazilian plastic surgery team.

Get Kim Kardashian-Type Butt With This New Technique

What Can Help You Live Up To 100 Years

What Can Help You Live Up To 100 Years
Tracking 855 Swedish men born in 1913, researchers have come to the conclusion that refraining from smoking, maintaining healthy cholesterol levels and having not more than four cups of coffee a day can help you live to 100.

What Can Help You Live Up To 100 Years

Save Your Skin In Summer With Vitamin C

Save Your Skin In Summer With Vitamin C
Britain's expert nutritionist Jacqueline Newson shares the lesser known benefits of the antioxidant and talks about the best way to get vitamin C into your cells

Save Your Skin In Summer With Vitamin C

Hopping Food Brands May Lead To Overeating

Hopping Food Brands May Lead To Overeating
People who eat different types and brands of commonly available food items, such as pizza, are more likely to overeat than people who tend to consume the same brand, says a new study.

Hopping Food Brands May Lead To Overeating

Extra Two Minutes Walking Can Add Years To Your Life

Extra Two Minutes Walking Can Add Years To Your Life
A "trade-off" of sitting for light intensity activities for two minutes each hour is associated with a 33 percent lower risk of dying, the findings showed.

Extra Two Minutes Walking Can Add Years To Your Life

Hide Food At Homes, If You Want To Shed Weight

Hide Food At Homes, If You Want To Shed Weight
Having a low self-esteem related to one's weight and keeping food visibly available around the house, outside the kitchen, may increase your likelihood of being obese, says a new research.

Hide Food At Homes, If You Want To Shed Weight