Patel, who inaugurated a national biomaterial centre (tissue bank) at the National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organisation (NOTTO), said it would also help avoid the inherent risk to the health of a living donor.
The main thrust and objective of the tissue bank is to fill up the gap between demand and supply as well as "quality assurance" in the availability of various tissues.
"It is important to understand that in India it is mainly the living donors who are donating organs and only about 23 per cent of the organ transplants are being done with organs obtained from cadavers.
She stressed the need to spread awareness in the community at large, that a living person can save the life of only one person but a deceased or cadaver organ donor can save up to 9 lives by donating vital organs.
"Apart from promoting organ donation, it is also important to improve the infrastructure and capacity of government hospitals to undertake transplantation so that the poor and the needy could benefit," she said.
The national-level tissue bank will fulfil the demands of tissue transplantation including activities for procurement, storage and fulfil distribution of biomaterials.
The activities of the centre will include coordination for tissue procurement and distribution, donor tissue screening, removal of tissues and storage, preservations of tissue, and laboratory screening of tissues.
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