China's first set of regulations on human organ
transplant, which prohibits organizations and individuals from
trading human organs in any form, went into effect on
Tuesday.
Any doctor found to be involved in human organ trade
will have their practitioner license revoked, according to the
regulations issued by the State Council, China's
cabinet.
Clinics will be suspended from doing organ transplant
operations for at least three years. Fines are set at between eight
to ten times the value of the outlawed trade, the regulations
say.
Officials convicted of trading in human organs will be
sacked and kicked out of the government.
China has carried out organ
transplants for more than 20 years and is the world's second
largest performer of transplants after the United States, with
about 5,000 transplants operated each year.
Most organs are donated by ordinary Chinese at death
after the voluntary signing of a donation agreement.
But the country faces a huge gap between the demand
for functional organs and the supply of donations. About 1.5
million patients need organ transplants each year, but only 10,000
can find organs, according to statistics from the Ministry of
Health.
The regulations stipulate that human organ transplants
should respect the principle of free will. And it is made a crime
to harvest organs without the owner's permission or
will.
Human organ transplants are defined as the process of
taking a human organ or part of a human organ -- such as the heart,
lung, liver, kidney and pancreas -- from a donor and transplanting
it into a patient's body to replace their sick or damaged
organ.
The regulations do not apply to transplants of human
tissue, such as cells, cornea and marrow.
The set of regulations comprises 32 articles in five
chapters, including human organ donations, human organ transplants,
legal responsibilities and supplementary points.
The regulations clarify strict supervision and control
for the few medical institutions that are allowed to perform organ
transplants, and set rules to standardize procedures so as to
prevent potential human rights abuses.
According to the regulations, every transplant must be
approved by an ethics committee set up in the medical institution.
A designated mechanism will ensure that medical institutions are
competent. Unqualified institutions will be ordered to exit the
market.
Along with the regulations on organ transplant, a new
set of regulations to promote employment opportunities for China's
83 million disabled people also took effect on Tuesday.
The regulations issued in February by the State
Council require that disabled people make up no less than 1.5
percent of the work force of government departments, enterprises
and institutions.
Disabled employees must be given equal promotion
opportunities and equal salaries and social insurance.
Statistics show that China has 82.96 million disabled
people but only 22.66 million are employed. The number of disabled
people increases by 300,000 a year.
Government departments, institutions and enterprises
that employ more disabled people will enjoy preferential taxation
and other policies, said the regulations.
Self-employed disabled will enjoy preferential
treatment in taxation and other management and registration
charges. They can also get small loans when starting their own
businesses, according to the regulations.
Also on Tuesday, a series of ministry regulations went
into effect, covering food safety, supply of drinkable water and
advertisement of new drugs.
(Xinhua News Agency May 2, 2007)
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