Context:
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Organ donation is a critical component of public health and social responsibility, yet India faces a paradox of high willingness but low deceased organ donation rates.
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Recent data from 2024 driving license applications highlights a significant gender dimension: women show greater willingness to donate organs after death, but men continue to dominate recipient lists.
Key Highlights:
Social Trend / Public Willingness
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Indian women display higher willingness for posthumous organ donation compared to men.
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Across 21 major states, women’s willingness ranged from 17% to 27%, while men’s ranged from 12% to 20%.
Donation Landscape in India
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India has:
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High living organ donation rate: 10.8 per million
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Very low deceased organ donation rate: 0.8 per million (globally lagging)
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Gender Disparity in Donors vs Recipients
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In 2023:
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Over 60% of organ donors were women
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Nearly 65% of organ recipients were men
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Health Need and Disease Burden
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Men accounted for 70% of liver transplant recipients in 2023.
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This may be linked to higher alcohol-related liver disease among men.
Systemic Disconnect
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Despite public intent and transplant infrastructure, India struggles to convert willingness into actual deceased donations, indicating gaps in:
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Awareness implementation
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Hospital coordination
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Consent and family decision-making
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Significance / Concerns
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Reflects broader gender patterns in Indian society:
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Women contribute more as caregivers/donors
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Men benefit more as recipients due to medical and social prioritisation
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Relevant Prelims Points:
Issue + Causes + Government Context
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Issue: Low deceased organ donation despite high willingness.
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Causes:
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Limited awareness at time of death
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Family refusal and social stigma
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Weak hospital-based organ retrieval systems
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Gendered healthcare access and disease patterns
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Benefits + Challenges + Impact
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Benefits: Saves lives, strengthens healthcare outcomes.
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Challenges: Consent barriers, poor deceased donation conversion, inequitable access.
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Impact: Continued organ shortage and gender imbalance in transplant outcomes.
Relevant Mains Points:
Social Justice and Gender Dimensions
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Women’s higher willingness reflects altruism but also societal expectations of sacrifice.
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Recipient dominance by men may reflect:
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Higher disease burden (liver disease)
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Preferential access to costly healthcare
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Governance and Public Health Gaps
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Systemic disconnect suggests need for stronger:
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Organ donation counselling units
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Brain-death identification protocols
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Transparent allocation systems
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Ethical and Equity Concerns
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Gender imbalance raises questions of:
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Fair access to transplants
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Social determinants of health
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Healthcare affordability and patriarchy
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Way Forward
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Promote deceased donation through:
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Mandatory hospital transplant coordinators
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Public awareness campaigns beyond pledges
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Family consent support mechanisms
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Ensure gender-sensitive healthcare access and prevention of lifestyle diseases.
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Strengthen NOTTO frameworks and transparent recipient prioritisation.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 1 (Indian Society): Gender roles, altruism, social patterns in healthcare
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GS 2 (Social Justice): Health equity, access to transplants, ethical governance
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Prelims: Key data, organ donation concepts, transplant framework
