A huge increase in
the number of people receiving a life-saving transplant in Scotland has been
attributed to a co-ordinated nationwide effort over the last six
years.
New statistics
show that 341 organ transplants were carried out from deceased organ donors in
2013/14; an increase of around 62 per cent since 2007/8. Similarly in this
period, there has been a 96 per cent increase in the number of people in
Scotland who have donated their organs after death.
In 2013-14, in
hospitals across Scotland, 106 individuals and their families made the selfless
decision to donate and, in doing so, transformed the lives of people on
transplant waiting lists across the country.
As of 31st March 2014, 2,110,881 people living
in Scotland had made their organ donation wishes known by joining the UK Organ
Donor Register. This represents 40 per cent of the Scottish population and
compares well against the UK average of 32 per cent.
Last year the
Scottish Government published A Donation and
Transplantation Plan for Scotland 2013-2020 which sets out the
ways in which it hopes to improve donation and transplantation in Scotland. The
plan builds on the very good progress made under the auspices of the Organ
Donation Taskforce between 2008 and 2013.
Public Health
Minister Michael Matheson said: “First and foremost I want to offer my
thanks to every donor and every donor’s family in Scotland who have
demonstrated such kindness and benevolence in the face of tragic and difficult
circumstances. It is our responsibility to ensure that people’s organ
donation wishes are respected and to ensure that we make every donation
count.
“Over the
last few years we have made important strides in raising awareness of the
importance of organ donation in Scotland and have been encouraging more and
more people to make their wishes known. The staff working in the NHS do a
fantastic job of ensuring that those wishes are respected and as a result more
and more people are able to get the life-changing transplant they
require.
"It’s
important to remember however that around 600 people in Scotland are still
waiting for an organ and we must be doing all we can to give them hope.
I’d like to take this opportunity to encourage everyone to make their
organ donation wishes known to their loved ones and to join the NHS Organ Donor
Register.”
By 2020 the
Scottish Government aims to increase deceased donation rates to 26 per million
of population. This figure currently stands at 20 per million of population, up
from 17.9 in 2012/13.
Background
Number
of Solid Organ Transplants from deceased donors by financial year 2007-2008 and
2013-2014
| |
2007/8
|
2013/14
|
|
TOTAL ORGANS
|
211
|
341
|
Source: NHS
Blood and Transplant
Number of deceased donors by financial year 2007-8 and
2013-2014
|
Financial year
|
Number
|
Deceased donor rate pmp
|
|
2007/2008
|
|
|
|
2013/2014
|
|
|
Source: NHS
Blood and Transplant
Number
of deaths on the organ transplant list** by financial
year
|
2007/08
|
2013/14
|
|
TOTAL
|
67
|
38
|
Source: NHS
Blood and Transplant
** includes cases
where patient was removed from transplant list due to deterioration and then
died
Number of
people with a Scottish postcode on the ODR as at 31 March
2007: On 31 March 2007 there were 1,479,105 people residing in
the Scotland postcode area on the UK Organ Donor Register (area defined by the
ONS NHS Postcode Directory). This is 28.9% of the Scottish population. This is
based on 5,116,900 of the Scottish population, figure taken from the mid 2006
population estimates from the Office for National Statistics.
Number of
people with a Scottish postcode on the ODR as at 31 March
2014: On 31 March 2014 there were 2,110,881 people residing in
the Scotland postcode area on the UK Organ Donor Register (area defined by the
ONS NHS Postcode Directory). This is 39.7% of the Scottish population. This is
based on 5,313,600 of the Scottish population, figure taken from the mid 2012
population estimates from the Office for National Statistics.
Notes To Editors
Interviews
Please contact
Alice Robertson, 0131 244 6899/ 07580801688 to arrange an interview with the
Minister for Public Health.
Also available for
interview is Professor John Forsythe, Scotland's Lead Clinician for Organ
Donation and Transplantation.
Peter McGeehan, 64 from Dunfermline, is also available for
photography/interview. He was given a second chance at life after suffering
serious heart failure in 2004. Desperately ill, with his chances of survival
extremely low, the heart transplant turned things around for Peter. In the ten
years since his transplant, the father of two has has thought about his donor
every single day.
Peter had his
first heart attack in 1992, aged 42, which damaged his heart muscles and put
increased pressure on his heart. Twelve years later, Peter went into serious
heart failure, with advanced signs of arrhythmia and ended up having a
Automatic Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator fitted in 2001. Peter's
condition quickly deteriorated, and with his heart enlarging rapidly, he was
listed for transplant in 2004.
After receiving
his transplant, Peter spent two months in hospital, getting home on Christmas
Eve to recuperate with his family around him.
Peter said:
“I had to go through a huge amount of rehabilitation and there are still
limitations to what I can do, but because of my donor , I’ve been to
Europe on holiday, I’ve seen my grandson Harry being born, and I’ve
watched my daughter get married.
“People take
living for granted, but as I approach the ten year anniversary I can honestly
say there’s never a day where I’ve woken up and haven’t
thought about my unnamed donor. People talk about unconditional love, and the
one person who showed me that kind of love was my mother. That’s exactly
what my donor did for me. Without meeting me, or judging me, that person
donated life to a stranger, and I couldn’t be more
grateful.”