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CHINESE legislators and medical workers have held heated
discussions over the past few days on the introduction of a
law defining brain death, the China Daily reported yesterday.
The debate flared after Vice-Minister of Health Huang
Jiefu said last Wednesday his ministry had completed draft
criteria for determining brain death.
Arguments for and against brain-death legislation have
raged for more than two decades in China, where death is
traditionally and legally defined as “the cessation of
respiration and blood circulation.”
The moment of most deaths is regarded as the time when
breathing stops and the heart stops beating.According to
traditional idea, organ transplants should be performed only
after the organ donor has stopped breathing and when the heart
has stopped beating.
But other organs have usually become useless by then. Chen
Zhonghua, a professor from Tongji Hospital in Wuhan in central
China’s Hubei Province, said that the law on brain death must
be strictly based on medical science, widespread public
acceptance and a sound legal environment.
Some experts said China does not yet have the conditions
needed to implement a law on brain death. Many doctors in
China still lack the necessary skill, knowledge or equipment
to correctly determine brain death, so the improvement of
medical training and hospital conditions is urgent.
Liu Gexin, a professor from the Beijing-based China
University of Politics and Law, said China need to establish
legally-recognized medical criteria on brain death, rather
than a law as such.(Xinhua)
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