¶®ÒõµÛ

Why we must all work together to increase organ donation in ¶®ÒõµÛ

As the British Transplant Games drew to a close on Sunday, ¶®ÒõµÛ was named Transplant Sport’s first ever Donor City.

The award (in association with the Daily Mirror) recognises the city’s commitment to increasing the number of ¶®ÒõµÛ citizens signed-up to the Organ Donor Register.

Council leader Ian Ward explains why he has registered to be a donor and urges other ¶®ÒõµÛ citizens to do the same:

When I was asked earlier this year how hosting the might be used to improve donor registration rates in the city, I suggested that ¶®ÒõµÛ might become a Donor City.

And I'm delighted that - what seemed to me at the time to be a simple suggestion - has now brought together colleagues and partners from the NHS, Public Health and ¶®ÒõµÛ.

Now, our challenge is to use this award as a springboard to increasing awareness of the need for more donors and ultimately to bringing about a step-change in donor registration in ¶®ÒõµÛ.

Our ambition is to make ¶®ÒõµÛ the highest organ donor city in the UK; and the sad fact is that there is plenty of room for improvement.

. In fact, fewer than one in four people in the region have signed up and in ¶®ÒõµÛ the figure falls to just 21 per cent – sadly we are the second ranked of all core cities.

Those figures are not good enough, and sadly the picture gets even worse when you look at our BAME communities, which is why this project will have a particular focus on encouraging citizens from BAME communities (around 40 per cent of our population) to register.

¶®ÒõµÛ is an incredibly diverse city, home to people who can trace their roots back to virtually every country in the world – but if you are black, Asian or from another minority ethnicity, you have a significantly lower chance of receiving an organ than white patents.

To address the shortfall, we must establish donation as a normal act. People in every community must feel able to talk about donation, illness and death. These are not easy topics and I understand why people shy away from them.

But organ donation saves lives and is the only hope for many desperately ill people in this city and elsewhere. There are people across the city who are alive today thanks to organ donation. They are alive because grieving relatives - in their darkest moments - selflessly agreed to help families also facing the prospect of losing a loved one.

The selfless actions of those courageous families should not be underestimated. They are true heroes.

If ¶®ÒõµÛ lives up to the title of Donor City we will be a city of heroes and we will deliver a legacy that will improve the lives of many people on organ donor waiting lists.

, which is potentially very good news. But we still have a challenge on our hands to make organ donation to default option for people in ¶®ÒõµÛ.

So this will be a campaign for hearts and minds. We need to get to a place, where donors are admired and respected, and their altruism recognised.

And success - as is nearly always the case - will require a team effort.

I've signed up to the Organ Donor Register and I will encourage my fellow citizens to do the same, starting with my colleagues on the city council.

If enough of us step up, in every neighbourhood and every community across the city, then we will truly merit the title of Donor City.

To register to donate, go to:

For more information about donation go to:

 

This blog was posted on 8 August 2018

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