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Many Hispanics hesitant about organ donation

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SAN ANTONIO, Texas | Mon Mar 28, 2011 11:23am EDT

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (Reuters Life!) - When Norma Garcia's teenage daughter was killed in a car wreck, she did not know that a decision she would make would be so controversial and test her cultural identity and Christian faith.

After her daughter Jasmine Garcia, 13, was declared brain dead following the 2001 accident, doctors at San Antonio's University Hospital in Texas asked her if she would donate her daughter's organs.

"The majority of my family had a belief that, 'How could you do that? How could you allow her to be mutilated? How could you let them take her heart out?'" said Garcia, a real estate agent.

"My parents are from Mexico, and they had the feeling that, 'She is your daughter. Why would you allow them to do this to her?"

Garcia decided to donate Jasmine's heart and liver. It was a decision that left her estranged from several relatives for some time.

Her experience highlights a cultural divide that organ donation advocates say is threatening the ability of surgeons to save lives through organ transplants.

Hispanics, especially first- and second-generation Mexican-Americans, are less likely to donate organs than Americans as a whole, according to organ donation experts.

"We find that the Hispanic community tells us, 'My religion says not to donate,' and 'I can't have an open casket because the body will be damaged,'" said Esmeralda Perez of the Texas Organ Sharing Alliance.

"They feel that their loved one will be disfigured, or the person will not be able to get into heaven because their body will not be whole."

In South Texas where Latinos make up the vast majority of 1.4 million residents organs from just 19 individuals were donated in 2010, according to the alliance. The overall U.S. average is about 26 organ donors per million, Perez said.

Thirty-one percent of organ donors across Texas in 2010 were Hispanic, while new census figures show that 42 percent of the state's population is Latino.

Latinos' reticence about organ donation centers on religion, said Nuvia Enriquez, Hispanic outreach coordinator for the Donor Network of Arizona.

"A lot of work that we do is to go out and try to dissolve some of these myths," she said. "We talk to them about the Catholic Church's position on donation, which is very positive. Pope John Paul II was actually the first pope to declare donation to be an act of love, and Pope Benedict, when he was Cardinal, was a card-carrying organ donor."

Rev. John Leies, a prominent Catholic theologian, said the church is working to convince the faithful that organ donation does not render the body unfit for the afterlife.

"The church is well aware that there are so may people waiting for organs, and there are not enough to be supplied and people die without receiving their organs," he said. "It is difficult to fight against these cultural ideas, and maybe the church hasn't made a good enough effort."

Perez said that 45 percent of patients on the national waiting list to receive organs are Hispanic.

Garcia said her relatives, who criticized her decision, have become big supporters of organ donation.

"After we all got more educated, and the family started attending these events where donors' families meet organ recipients, and seeing how much of a difference this has made in the lives of others, and the good they could do for all these people, and how this was keeping Jasmine's memory alive, I think they realized it was the right decision," she said.

(Edited by Corrie MacLaggan and Steve Gorman)

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Comments (18)
TLWiz wrote:
Simply only allow transplants for people who have signed up to be organ donors – or for minor children of people who have signed up to be organ donors. If you are not willing to donate organs, you should not expect to receive any.

Mar 28, 2011 1:16pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
emag wrote:
Is there anything that religion will not totally screw up?

Mar 28, 2011 1:24pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
BigEarlXXX wrote:
That’s pretty funny… painting the poor Mexicans as ignorant.

The truly ignorant do not realize that the definition of brain death is not consistent and varies from city to city, hospital to hospital, and even department to department. It all depends upon the need for organs. If the need goes up, the criterium goes down.

Doctors switched from cardiopulmonary death to brain death in the 1960’s when doctors were scrambling to try out the (then) new heart transplants. There were not enough hearts available under the old definition, so the Harvard Commission came up with a definition that would free up more donor hearts.

A growing number of people are becoming skeptical of the definition of brain death, given our sparce knowledge of how the brain functions.
80% of transplant teams are not organ donors themselves. What should we conclude from that?

Mar 28, 2011 1:26pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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