Serious health crisis to be resolved: The organ shortage
3rd International Conference on Health Care and Health Management
November 04-05, 2019 | Prague, Czech Republic
Felix Cantarovich
Argentine Catholic University, Argentina
Keynote : J Public Health Policy Plann
Abstract:
Organ Transplantation benefits society, changing death
on life. Evidence suggests that transplantation medicine
might be a health guarantee for society. However, organ
shortage limits this possibility. The progress of transplantation
medicine has generated the need for novel methods and
government support to implement, without restriction, this
society’s benefit. This advance in medical practice should
lead to new health programs that should be different from
those currently offered. The transformation of death into
life, which is what organ transplants symbolize, requires the
end of a human being. Knowledge and acceptance of an
unexpected metaphor, “transforming death into life”, should
be acknowledged by health decision makers and understood
by the people. An increasing number of patients are unjustly
dying each year while waiting for a donated organ. This
reality evidences that society’s response to donation is still
inadequate and that the organ shortage dilemma is still
present.
In the analysis of the causes of this social behaviour towards
donation, it is rational to consider that social education
programmes, permanently structured under the slogan
“donation is a gift of life”, have not been successful in
changing people’s feelings towards organ donation. It should
be noted that fear of death, mutilation, distrust of medical
teams, and religious uncertainty, currently suggested as the
main barriers to donation, have never been considered in the
evaluation of current educational methodologies. People’s
acknowledgement of slogans such as “throughout our lives
we are all potential recipients of organs and tissues”; “the
body after death is a unique source of health for all”, and the
catchphrase “sharing the donated organs could be a social
agreement” that could potentially be useful when developing
new criteria to structure organ donation social education.
Finally, curricular organ donation education of young people
might be an important contribution to a solution to this
critical problem.
Biography:
Félix Cantarovich is an associate professor of Medical Sciences Buenos Aires at Catholic University Argentina. He is a Professor of Nephrology at University Lyon France. He also serves as a Professor and Director Course of Transplantology at Catholic University Argentine. He was a Former Chief Nephrology at Dialysis Transplantation Central Hospital Cosme Argerich Buenos Aires. He was a Consultant of Transplantation and Intensive Care at Hôpital Necker in Paris, France. He also served as a Councillor and Chairman of Educational Committee International Society Organ Sharing. He was a Chairman of Scientific Committee International Congress Transplantation, 2002. He was a Secretary at Latin American and Caribbean Transplantation Society. He is also a President of Argentine Transplantation Society.
E-mail: felix.cantarovich@orange.fr
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