Healht - Part 1
Healht - Part 2
Healht - Part 3
Healht - Part 4
Healht - Part 5
Healht - Part 6
Healht - Part 7
Healht - Part 8
Healht - Part 9
Healht - Part 10
Healht - Part 11
Healht - Part 12
Healht - Part 13
Healht - Part 14
Healht - Part 15
Healht - Part 16
Healht - Part 17
Healht - Part 18
Healht - Part 19
Healht - Part 20

Medicine - Part 1
Medicine - Part 2
Medicine - Part 3
Medicine - Part 4
Medicine - Part 5
Medicine - Part 6

Medicine - Part 7
Medicine - Part 8
Medicine - Part 9
Medicine - Part 10
Medicine - Part 11
Medicine - Part 12
Medicine - Part 13
Medicine - Part 14
Medicine - Part 15
Medicine - Part 16
Medicine - Part 17
Medicine - Part 18


Facts+About+Organ+And+Tissue+Transplants

  • There is a chronic shortage of most organs needed for transplant in Canada. More than 3,500 Canadians are currently awaiting organ transplants.

  • In Canada, up to 30 per cent of people in need of a solid organ transplant die on the waiting list.

  • Only one per cent of all deaths in Canada, in any year, are suitable for possible organ donation.

  • Demand for transplants is increasing while the number of organ donors remains unchanged.

  • The spread of Hepatitis-C will increase the need for liver transplants five-fold by 2008. Up to 30 per cent of Hepatitis-C cases damage the liver seriously enough to prove fatal.

  • Survival rates of transplant patients continue to improve and a majority of recipients live healthy and productive lives.

  • Transplants are cost-effective. For those with kidney disease, the average cost of dialysis treatment is $50,000 a year. By comparison, the one-time cost of a kidney transplant in BC is approximately $20,000, with an additional yearly cost of about $6,000 for anti-rejection medications.

    For more information on organ and tissue donation and how you can donate, visit www.healthcanada.ca/organandtissue on the Internet.

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