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India's Brain Death Rule: A New Era for Organ Donation?
13 Dec
Summary
- Supreme Court directs national organ donation policy framework.
- Form 4 and 4A may be amended for brain stem death reporting.
- Doctors lack familiarity and confidence in brain death certification.

The Supreme Court of India has directed the central government to consider amending registration rules to include brain stem death certification, paving the way for a national organ donation policy. This move seeks to establish brain death as a standard definition of death, integrating organ donation into routine hospital procedures rather than solely a transplant-driven activity. Despite Kerala's earlier efforts to delink brain death certification from organ donation, medical professionals express a significant knowledge gap and hesitation.
Historically, brain death in India has been primarily defined in the context of organ donation, leading to ethical dilemmas for clinicians. Kerala's 2020 initiative aimed to clarify that all treatment, including life support, should cease after brain death certification, with organ donation counseling following. However, this has not significantly increased proactive certification by doctors over the past five years.
Senior medical professionals note that brain death determination is not adequately covered in undergraduate studies, leading to a lack of confidence and familiarity. Intensive training has been provided to hundreds of doctors, but few are taking proactive steps. Experts suggest that the rigorous scrutiny and zero-error expectation surrounding the process deter doctors, highlighting a need for continuous training and system support to build confidence and establish brain death determination as a standard practice.




