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  1. Improving Medical Infrastructure

  • Increasing hospital capacity: Ensuring hospitals are equipped and staffed to perform transplants.
  • Centres of excellence: Develop specialized transplant centres to attract transplant experts and provide the highest quality care.
  1. Law and Public Policy

  • Opt-out vs. Opt-in: Implement a system of presumed consent (opt-out), where all citizens are considered organ donors unless they explicitly opt-out.
  • Donor benefits: providing incentives for donor families or living donors, such as covering medical costs or tax benefits.
  • Psychological support: providing psychological support and counseling for donor families, both before and after the donation process.
  1. Research and Development

  • Improving preservation techniques: Developing more efficient methods of organ preservation and transportation to extend the window of time in which organs can be successfully transplanted.
  • New technologies: Investment in research to develop new technologies, such as artificial organs, xenotransplantation (transplanting organs from animals to humans) and organ regeneration through biotechnology.
  1. International Cooperation

  • International agreements: Cooperation between countries to facilitate the exchange of organs and optimize the use of available global resources.
  • Global standardization: Adoption of international standards for donation and transplantation processes to ensure the quality and safety of procedures.

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