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  • 5 months ago
Despite having a legal framework, deceased organ donations remain extremely rare in Pakistan due to limited public awareness and inadequate donor programs.
Transcript
00:00foreign
00:1631 May, the doctor has been accident.
00:20The doctor told us that his life is not going to be able to survive.
00:24So we felt that the pain of our children is going to be the pain of our children.
00:30Our children are going to be the same as our children are going to be the same.
00:34If someone else has a life, we will be happy.
00:54The demand is very high, like organ supply is less and the demand is less.
01:12Over that, in Pakistan, the only program is live related.
01:17There is no disease donor program here in Pakistan.
01:21So, in that context, usually, the donating pool is very limited.
01:38I have waited for 2-3 years for 2-3 years.
01:41I will be able to donate.
01:43But there was no such person who gave me a transplant.
01:47So, in that context, my father told me that I will give myself.
01:51After that, when I gave my father,
01:54I had a lot of money.
01:56So, until my father gave me a grant to transplant.
02:00This program, like the disease donor program, is the need of the day.
02:13And work-up should be done on that because ultimately, this can solve the process of short organ supply.
02:22So, I was around $10,000 times the whole thing will be said for,
02:31And I am going to get from the end to the end.
02:33So, it was very close to the end.
02:35And I am going to get from the end.
02:37In that context, my father had to help me.
02:38Because I was going to sit here.
02:39In that context, my father had been clasers.
02:42I was going to turn that the end.
02:43And we're going to get the end.
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