Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Research. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Organ Donation and Ethnicity Study

Organ Donation and Ethnicity Study (ODES)

Despite several successful Campaigns there remains a severe shortage of organs for transplant in the UK and particular for Indo-Asian and Afro-Caribbean ethnic groups. Unfortunately, people from Indo-Asian and Afro-Caribbean ethnic backgrounds are more likely to need an organ transplant because of higher rates of high blood pressure and diabetes than the general population which can lead to kidney failure. Furthermore, since some organs are often matched by tissue type and blood group, an organ from the same ethnic group is more likely to be successful. The Organ Donation and Ethnicity Study (ODES) aims to understand better the relationship between ethnic beliefs and organ donation by talking to people from a White British/Irish, Indo-Asian and Afro-Caribbean ethnic background with a positive or ambivalent opinion of organ donation and transplantation. From this sample we aim to understand how people are managing to integrate the idea of organ donation and transplantation into their lives including their ethnic and spiritual beliefs.
The Faculty of Medicine recently celebrated its first decade, having been established in 1997, bringing together all the major West London medical schools into one world-class institution.

Imperial College London Faculty of Medicene .The Faculty is one of Europe's largest medical institutions - in terms of its staff and student population and its research income.

Monday, October 1, 2007

RESEARCH SHOWS CHANGE IN LAW NEEDED

SSRN-The Impact of Presumed Consent Legislation on Cadaveric Organ Donation: A Cross Country Study by Alberto Abadie, Sebastien Gay click
LEADING HAVARD AND CHICAGO RESEARCH BACKS NEED FOR LEGISLATIVE CHANGE

The gap between the demand and the supply of human organs for transplantation is on the rise, despite the efforts of governments and health agencies to promote donor registration. In some countries of continental Europe, however, cadaveric organ procurement is based on the principle of presumed consent. Under presumed consent legislation, a deceased individual is classified as a potential donor in absence of explicit opposition to donation before death. This article analyzes the impact of presumed consent laws on donation rates. For this purpose, this research constructs a dataset on organ donation rates and potential factors affecting organ donation for 22 countries over a 10-year period.

The Research finds that while differences in other determinants of organ donation explain much of the variation in donation rates, after controlling for those determinants presumed consent legislation has a positive and sizeable effect on organ donation rates.

THE PLUS CAMPAIGN WILL MAKE THIS CLEAR TO THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF WALES.