Students at Nguyễn Du High School attend a roundtable meeting on the importance of organ donations. VNS Photo Thu Hằng
Thu Hằng
HCM CITY — "Organ donations can give life to others. Donating is a good deed we can do after death," says Phạm Hùng, a 12th grader at Nguyễn Du High School in Bà Rịa Vũng Tàu Province.
Hùng and his close friend Đinh Hữu Thiên Phúc, an 11th grader at the school, have been working for months on a research project that raises students' awareness about the value of organ donations.
Their project has received a positive response from teachers, students and officials.
“We wanted to do something to spread the good will and compassion shown by organ donors, who help to save other people,” Hùng says.
The two students say they were especially inspired by the story of a seven-year-old girl from Hà Nội who died of a brain tumor last year and whose corneas were donated for transplant operations in two patients.
Watching An’s inspiring story on television, Hùng and Phúc were motivated by the girl’s desire to help people who are waiting for a transplant.
In March last year, they began conducting a survey on how high school students view organ donations and then made videos on organ donations and transplants.
“After doing further research, we discovered that very few students know about organ and tissue donation. Music idols and games draw the interest of most students," Hùng says.
The two students are also active in roundtable meetings and social media platforms where they talk about organ donations and encourage people to register as organ and tissue donors.
"When I first began talking about this, my grandmother and father resisted it. My father refused to donate his organs because he wants an intact body after burial," Hùng says. "My other relatives said they hated the idea of cadaver manipulation."
Students Phạm Hùng and Đinh Hữu Thiên Phúc from Nguyễn Du High School in Bà Rịa Vũng Tàu Province have worked for months on a research project that raises students' awareness about the value of donating organs after death. VNS Photo Thu Hằng
Educational campaigns
Nguyễn Thị Thúy, the students' research supervisor and a technology teacher at the school, says that she appreciates the message they are spreading about the value of organ donations.
With Thúy’s guidance, the students have received advice about the organ-donation process and the law from experts at Chợ Rẫy Hospital’s Unit for Co-ordinating Human Organ Transplants in HCM City.
Dư Thị Ngọc Thu, head of the unit, says: “I was really surprised when teachers and students from the school came to the hospital to seek information and consultancy. It was the first time I had heard about research done by high school students on raising awareness about organ donations.”
“I hope that it will help lay the foundation for cooperation between the Ministry of Education and Training and the Ministry of Health to include education about organ and tissue donations in extra-curricular programmes at high schools and universities,” Thu says.
“The law prohibits anyone younger than age 18 to donate their organs after death. However, students can learn at a young age about organ donation and transplant operations. This can change their attitudes and they can be ready to sign up for organ donation when they're adults,” she adds.
Nguyễn Văn Tâm, rector at Nguyễn Du High School, says a wide range of educational activities about organ donations were held over the last year, including a story-telling contest, round-table meeting, and acting in school plays.
Many teachers have also been inspired and have decided to donate their organs after death.
Thúy, the students' supervisor, was the first person at the school to sign up to donate her organs after death, followed by 19 other teachers.
Last week, Dư Thị Ngọc Thu, head of Chợ Rẫy Hospital’s Unit for Co-ordinating Human Organ Transplants, gave out organ-donation cards to teachers at a roundtable meeting held at the school.
Dư Thị Ngọc Thu, head of Chợ Rẫy Hospital’s Unit for Co-ordinating Human Organ Transplants, gives out organ-donation cards to teachers at a roundtable meeting at a school in Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu Province. VNS Photo Thu Hằng
Mai Thị Mai, a teacher of civic education at the school, says: "Organ donation is a meaningful action that anyone can do to give life to others. I'm really pleased to support this project and spread the word about its importance."
Nguyễn Hùng Anh, a 12th grade student at Nguyễn Du High School, says that "We can live ‘another life’ even after our death".
"I'm ready to sign up as an organ donor when I get older."
In Việt Nam, more than 10,000 people suffer end-state organ failure, which can only be treated with an organ transplant, according to Thu.
Organ transplants in Việt Nam depend heavily on donations from live relatives due to a dire shortage of organ donations after death. — VNS