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posted by janrinok on Monday September 29 2014, @09:09PM   Printer-friendly
from the you-put-your-left-leg-in,-your-left-leg-out... dept.

ScienceDaily reports:

Researchers say there should be an international database containing the very latest information about organ donations and transplants, so policy makers can make informed decisions on whether to adopt an opt-out or opt-in system.

The call comes after a study [in the UK], carried out by The University of Nottingham, the University of Stirling and Northumbria University, showed that overall an opt-out system might provide a greater number of organs for transplant but many factors can influence the success of either system and a repository of accessible information would help individual countries decide which one would be better for them.

The research published in the online academic journal BioMed Central Medicine (BMC Medicine), is the first international comparison that examines both deceased as well as living organ/transplant rates in opt-in and opt-out systems.

[...] Professor Fergusson argues that it is imperative for transplant organizations to routinely collect data on important organ donation indices -- consent type, procurement procedure, number of intensive care beds and trained surgeons -- and make this publicly available to inform future research and policy recommendations.

 
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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Dunbal on Monday September 29 2014, @11:45PM

    by Dunbal (3515) on Monday September 29 2014, @11:45PM (#99838)

    Because my body belongs to me not the state and certainly not some committee. If you are so desperate for organ donors how about educating people about the benefits of being a donor and getting people to become organ donors (aka the hard but smart way) instead of passing some draconian law that tramples over everyone's autonomy and assumes that anyone's body is state property (aka the "he's as good as dead no one will care if we unplug him now anyway" easy but morally corrupt way).

    Making organ donation opt out is just a way of circumventing the inconvenience of having to ask the question, and shame on whoever is greedy enough to want my kidneys yet callous enough to not even ask me for them.

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