PM approves new centre for organ, tissue transplants
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has approved the setting up of a research and development centre for human organ and tissue transplants at 108 Military Hospital.
Surgeons in Cho Ray Hospital perform a liver transplant in October 2015 (Photo: choray.vn)
Hanoi (VNA) – Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has approved the setting up of a research and development centre for human organ and tissue transplants at 108 Military Hospital🍷.
The centre will be set up with state funding for scientific and technological development during the 2016-21 period, as proposed by the ministries of defence and science and technology.
The Ministry of Finance and relevant agencies have been asked to arrange and disburse proper funding for the project. The Ministry of National Defence and 108 Institute of Clinical Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences under 108 Military Hospital have been asked to complete the project procedures.
The National Coordination Centre for Organ Transplantation was established at Viet Duc Hospital in 2013. It connects donors of organs with those waiting for organ transplants. There are 13 hospitals across the country that can carry out organ transplants.
Vietnamese doctors have conducted 1,500 kidney, 50 liver and 13 heart transplants so far.
Vietnam passed a law relating to organ donation in 2006. However, the number of clinically-dead patients whose organs have been donated is extremely low. About 99.4 percent of the organ transplants in Vietnam are done with organs donated by living people, while the remaining 0.6 percent is conducted with organs donated by brain-dead people.
The first organ transplant involving a brain-dead donor was conducted at Cho Ray Hospital in HCM City in 2010. Since then, similar surgeries have been carried out at Viet Duc Hospital, Military Medical Academy and Hue Central Hospital. Organs harvested from 35 clinically-dead patients were donated to 100 other people.-VNA
More than 1,400 people have registered to donate organs and tissue, setting a new record in Vietnam, at a festival entitled Joining Hands for Life, on December 19 in Hanoi.
Up to 3,542 people nationwide have registered to donate their organs and tissue after they die as by December 31, 2015, according to the National Centre for Coordinating Human Organ Transplants.
Cho Ray Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City was honoured with the State’s Labour Order (first class) for the second time during its 115th founding anniversary on February 23.
Vietnam passed a law relating to organ donation in 2006, however, so far the number of clinically-dead patients who have consented to donate their organs has been extremely low.
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Renowned for its expertise in complex surgeries, the hospital has attracted foreign patients seeking treatment for conditions such as kidney and urinary tract stones, urological and gastrointestinal cancers, and male reproductive disorders. Most procedures are performed using advanced techniques, including laparoscopy and robotic surgery. T
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