Philippine Lawmakers Move To Establish National System For Organ And Tissue Transplantation
WORLD NEWS – PHILIPPINES: A cluster of legislative measures advancing through the national legislature promises to reshape organ and tissue transplantation policy, with health authorities and advocacy groups urging a centralized national system to expand access and curb exploitation. The Department of Health and allied health groups backed House Bill 503, which promotes postmortem organ and tissue donation and a Comprehensive National System for Organ Donation, arguing the shift could give many patients new chances at life while tightening protections for donors.
Lawmakers reported that 456 patients are currently scheduled for procedures at the National kidney and Transplant Institute, underscoring a critical shortfall in available donors rather than medical capacity. Committees have approved complementary proposals: a bill encouraging kidney donation, another introducing penalties to deter illegal trade and trafficking in human organs and tissues, and measures to build a formal National System for donation and transplantation. Supporters say these reforms would include standardized procurement protocols, a deceased donation program, and stepped-up public education to increase donor registration.
Beyond transplant logistics, the legislative sweep includes health infrastructure and regulatory proposals that intersect with transplantation goals. One bill would allocate funding for a liver center and specialty facilities, while another targets counterfeit pharmaceuticals by strengthening regulatory enforcementβmoves framed as part of broader patient-safety and system-integrity efforts. Proponents emphasize that better coordination, clear legal safeguards, and information campaigns are central to preventing exploitation and ensuring donor safety.
Committees advanced several of the measures in recent hearings, moving them closer to full legislative consideration. If enacted, the proposed laws aim to increase transplant availability, protect donors, and formalize a national framework for organ and tissue procurement and transplantation, while reinforcing healthcare capacity and regulatory oversight across the system.
Video originally published on 2026-01-28 05:21:20
