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- Archive 2019
- 2015 Elections: 11 new BME MP’s make history
- 70th Anniversary of the Partition of India
- Black Church Manifesto Questionnaire
- Brett Bailey: Exhibit B
- Briefing Paper: Ethnic Minorities in Politics and Public Life
- Civil Rights Leader Ratna Lachman dies
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- Gary Younge Book Sale
- George Osborne's budget increases racial disadvantage
- Goldsmiths Students' Union External Trustee
- International Commissioners condemn the appalling murder of Tyre Nichols
- Iqbal Wahhab OBE empowers Togo prisoners
- Job Vacancy: Head of Campaigns and Communications
- Media and Public Relations Officer for Jean Lambert MEP (full-time)
- Number 10 statement - race disparity unit
- Pathway to Success 2022
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- Rashan Charles had no Illegal Drugs
- Serena Williams: Black women should demand equal pay
- Thank you for your donation
- The Colour of Power 2021
- The Power of Poetry
- The UK election voter registration countdown begins now
- Volunteering roles at Community Alliance Lewisham (CAL)
Organ transplants: Ethnic minorities urged to discuss donations
It was only recently that I became aware of how easy it is to be on the NHS Organ Donor Register. When I was in my teens I had an Organ Donor card that soon became tatty with the personal details illegible. After discarding this card over twenty years ago, I didn't think about being a donor again until I started to do some work with a Leukaemia charity. It was then I decided to find out how to be a blood and organ donor, and how quick and saiple it is.
This reproduced BBC piece focuses on the low proportion of African, Asian and Caribbean donors and the need for more to come forward.
You can register to donate below:
Ashok Viswanathan-OBV
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Organ transplants: Ethnic minorities urged to discuss donations
A shortage of transplant organs for black people and Asians in the UK is being caused by a lack of donations from within those communities, NHS Blood and Transplant has said.
Fewer than a third of black and Asian families allow a dead relative's organs to be used, compared with two-thirds of white families.
More than 1,300 people died waiting for a transplant in the UK last year.
The NHS said ethnic minority groups needed to discuss organ donation.
Although people from ethnic minorities can receive organs from white donors, the best match is often from a person with the same ethnic background.
The figures come from the Organ Donation and Transplantation Activity Report 2015-16, which is published on Thursday,
Its findings include:
- Donation consent rate increased to 62% - the target is 80% by 2020
- 26% of the current waiting list are people from black or Asian communities and need donors from their own community
- In 2015-16, the consent rate for potential donors from black, Asian and minority ethnic communities was almost half that of white patients - 34% compared with 66%
- 5% of all deceased organ donors were from black and Asian backgrounds
The report is published ahead of Organ Donation Week, which runs from 5 to 11 September.
A campaign to increase the UK's rate of donations - currently among the lowest in Europe - has boosted the number by only 5% in four years.
The Welsh government says that since last December, when the law there changed to presume consent, the number of patients whose lives have been saved or improved by a transplant has increased by a quarter.
NHS Blood and Transplant also says family refusal is biggest obstacle to organ donation.
And it describes organ donation is "relatively rare" in the UK, because although more than half a million people die each year, only about 1% do so in circumstances which allow organs to be donated.
Sally Johnson, of NHS Blood and Transplant, said that as most people are prepared to accept a donated organ, they needed to be ready to donate also.
She added: "It is especially important for people from our black and Asian communities to talk about organ donation.
"I realise that this is a very difficult subject, but there are many black and Asian people who need a transplant. While some are able to receive an organ from a white donor, others will die if there is no donor from their own community."
Original Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-37236075
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