Mexico Reports Surge In Organ Transplants Led By Public Hospitals And National Registry

WORLD NEWS – MEXICO: Mexico’s health authorities announced a striking rise in organ transplantation activity, saying the bulk of procedures have been carried out in public hospitals under coordinated national oversight. Health Secretary David Kersenovich highlighted that every transplant recipient has been placed on immunosuppressive therapy to reduce rejection risk, a step officials credit with boosting success rates and enabling a rapid increase in complex operations.

Officials provided a detailed tally of recent activity: 2,783 kidney transplants have been performed, and over the past five years a total of 14,347 transplants were recorded, of which 10,104 came from living donors and 4,243 from deceased donors. The nation also logged 245 liver transplants during 2025, 46 heart transplants this year—including four dual heart procedures—and 10 lung transplants in 2025, underscoring a growing capacity for high-stakes cardiovascular and thoracic transplantation.

The numbers reflect both operational scale-up and tighter clinical management, with the national transplant system emphasizing public-hospital involvement and post-surgical immunosuppression as pillars of improved outcomes. The prominence of living donation in the five-year figures points to active community participation, while the emergence of dual heart transplants signals advanced surgical collaboration and resource commitment across transplant centers.

Authorities are pressing the case for more donors and have streamlined registration through the Centro Nacional de Transplantes. The national program frames these operations as life-saving interventions and is urging citizens to consider donor registration to sustain momentum and meet urgent patient needs across Mexico’s public health network.

Living Donor Guidance: To join the donor registry, complete a voluntary registration with the Centro Nacional de Transplantes by telephone or via the official web portal. Registrants will be asked for basic information—full name, CURP, email address, and physical address—and will receive a certificate confirming that, in the event of death, they consent to organ donation.


Video originally published on 2025-12-31 04:30:15


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