HOW COULD WE IMPROVE THE PHILIPPINE ORGAN DONATION SYSTEM?
HOW COULD WE IMPROVE THE PHILIPPINE ORGAN DONATION SYSTEM? I find it hard to believe that in a country of more than 110 million people, we have barely over a hundred registered organ donors. That is not even a fraction of one percent. Compare that with countries like the United States, where roughly 60% of adults are registered donors, and the gap becomes not just alarming—but tragic. What happened to us? We cannot say that we lack laws. We already have Republic Act No. 7170. The legal framework exists. The intent is clear. But as in many other areas, we seem better at writing laws than implementing them. So where is the real problem? At first glance, one might think it is technical. It is not. We already have systems like the Philippine Network for Organ Sharing, and we are more than capable of building modern databases for matching donors and recipients. Technology is not our bottleneck. Is it financial? Again, I doubt it. The cost of building a functional system is minimal compared ...