Transplantation Proceedings
Volume 41, Issue 9 , Pages 3551-3555, November 2009

Changes in the Organ Procurement System in South Korea: Effects on Brain-Dead Donor Numbers

  • S.D. Lee

      Affiliations

    • Department of Forensic Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea
  • ,
  • J.H. Kim

      Affiliations

    • Department of Medical Humanities and Social Sciences & Center for Medical Research and Information, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to Jang Han Kim, MD, PhD, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, 388-1 Pungnap-2dong, Songpa-gu, Seoul 138-736 Korea

Abstract 

In Korea, the Organ Transplantation Act came into effect in 2000, establishing the Korean Network for Organ Sharing (KONOS) with centralized authority for organ procurement as well as for approval of donors and recipients to ensure fair organ allocation. However, the number of brain-dead donors decreased sharply, and the organ allocation system proved inefficient. The government revised the Organ Transplantation Act in August 2002, introducing an incentive system. If a transplantation hospital formed a Committee for Brain Death Evaluation and a Hospital Organ Procurement Organization, it could receive a kidney from a brain dead-donor as an incentive to foster organ procurement regardless of the KONOS wait list. The government also launched a pilot brain-dead donor registry program to strengthen Hospital Organ Procurement Organization activity. If local hospitals collaborated with specialized hospitals in organ procurement, local hospitals obtained financial incentives. But because the organ shortage problem has not been resolved, the government has proposed four initiatives: first, broadening the incentive system, which makes it possible to give each specialized hospital a choice of one of eight organs from each donor as an incentive; second, development of an Independent Organ Procurement Organization; third introduction of an opt-out system; and last, improvement of the Committee for Brain Death Evaluation system. It is uncertain which initiatives will be adopted, but changes in organ procurement systems are nonetheless considered a key to solve the organ shortage problem in Korea.

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PII: S0041-1345(09)01381-5

doi:10.1016/j.transproceed.2009.06.210

Transplantation Proceedings
Volume 41, Issue 9 , Pages 3551-3555, November 2009