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Cover of organ donation teaching resource pack

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Organ donation teaching pack

03/11/2003

A better informed nation about organ donation and transplantation is the main aim of a new teaching resource pack.

The pack, believed to be the only one of its kind in the world, aims to educate senior pupils on the issues surrounding organ donation. It does not promote the subject or pressurise them into consent or participation.

It includes sections on:

  • Ethical and religious issues
  • Transplant laws and the need for transplants
  • The transplantation process
  • Donor and recipient stories
  • A question and answer section
  • Activity sheets with quizzes

The pack is supported by a video which provides real life stories concerning organ donation and transplantation.

Launching the pack, Health Minister Malcolm Chisholm said:

"This is a remarkable initiative and as far as we are aware pioneering. Scotland appears to be the first country in the world to develop such as a resource pack for use in schools. All those involved in its creation should be very proud.

"Apart from its intrinsic value as a teaching resource, the development of this pack has the potential, over time, to create a generation who can make informed choices about organ donation.

"These materials have been specifically written to create awareness, impart information, and to encourage discussion on the ethical issues around organ donation and transplantation. Knowledge and information should also reduce any possible fears and confusions around these sensitive issues."

"The aim of the pack is to educate young people on the issues surrounding organ donation and transplantation, not to promote the subject or pressurise them into consent or participation.

"The importance of these resources and the implicit methodology cannot be overstated. As citizens, young people, like all of us, are required to make decisions. It is hoped that these resources will go some way to help in this process of informed decision making in the highly important and sensitive area of organ donation."

Sue Sutherland, the Chief Executive of UK Transplant said:

"This is an exciting and innovative scheme. The pack will enable teenagers to explore the complex range of ethical and moral issues surrounding organ donation and transplantation as part of their course work and encourage them to talk about it with their family and friends.

"We know from our research that while many adults find this a difficult subject to discuss, children of school age have much less difficulty in doing so. The project has the potential, over time, to raise a more educated generation who make informed choices about organ donation and related issues and bring about a fundamental shift in public attitudes towards organ donation."

The development of the Organ Donation Teaching Resource Pack was one of
the key recommendations in the Scottish Transplant Groups, Organ Donation Strategy for Scotland, published in July 2002.

The Scottish Transplant Group was set up in February 2001 to provide advice and make recommendations to the Scottish Executive on all matters relating to organ donation and transplantation. Its membership is made up of clinicians from each of the transplant units in Scotland, patient representatives, a Local Health Council member, a donor family representative and United Kingdom Transplant (UKT).

UK Transplant is a Special Health Authority charged with maintaining the NHS Organ Donor register and allocating available donor organs on a UK basis.

The Pack, which was developed with advice from Learning and Teaching Scotland and the Schools Inspectorate, contains information on all issues surrounding organ donation and transplantation. Great care has been taken in its development to ensure that as an educational tool it is aimed at creating awareness, imparting information and encouraging discussion on the ethical issues around organ donation and transplantation. Teachers will be encouraged to use it as a source of fresh material to supplement existing teaching aids.

The Pack contains written material for use by teachers in preparing lessons in Senior School, Personal, Social Education Programmes. The short video which has also been prepared as part of the Pack provides real life stories about organ donation and transplantation, and it is intended to be used as a general introduction.

At the end of 2002, 609 people in Scotland were on the waiting list for an organ: 577 for a kidney, 21 for a heart or heart and lungs and 18 for a liver. About 50 people die each year while waiting for a new organ.

You can view a part of the video that comes with the teaching pack by clicking on the link above. The clip features the story of the Murray family who lost their son to a fatal accident, and consequently had to make hard decisions about organ donation.

Page updated: Wednesday, July 21, 2004