China to halt inmate organ transplant

China to halt inmate organ transplant

BEIJING - The Associated Press
China will start phasing out its reliance on organs from executed prisoners for transplants early next year as a new national donation system is implemented, a government-appointed expert has said.

Chinese officials acknowledge that a transplantation system that uses mostly organs from death-row prisoners is neither ethical nor sustainable, Wang Haibo said in an interview in the November edition of the World Health Organization’s journal Bulletin. An organ donation system run by the Red Cross Society of China has been piloted for two years in 16 regions and is scheduled to be rolled out nationwide by early 2013, Wang said.

“Now there is consensus among China’s transplant community that the new system will relinquish the reliance on organs from executed convicts,” Wang said. “The implementation of the new national system will start early next year at the latest. This will also mark the start of phasing out the old practice.” Wang was appointed last year by China’s Health Ministry to lead a center that is researching and designing a system to fairly and efficiently allocate organs to people who need them.

Vice Minister of Health Huang Jiefu was cited by official Xinhua news agency as saying China will abolish the transplanting of organs from executed prisoners within five years and try to spur more citizens to donate.