The Chinese government has set out strict new procedures for the
use and international transport of human corpses and body parts to
be effective as of August 1.
A new regulation bans the trade of corpses and commercial
activities involving corpses.
No organization or individual is allowed to accept body
donations except medical institutes, medical schools, medical
research institutes and forensic research institutes.
Those in receipt of bodies should arrange interment after
use.
The transport of bodies into and from China for interment must
be approved by civil affairs departments, customs and inspection
and quarantine authorities.
The exit and entry of bodies for medical and scientific purposes
must be approved in accordance with the Regulation on Human
Hereditary Resources issued by the State Council and the Quarantine
Regulation of Special Medical Items issued by the Ministry of
Health and the State Quality and Quarantine Administration.
No other reasons for international transport will be approved,
says the regulation.
The regulation defines "corpses" as human bodies, body parts
such as organs and bones, and specimens of bodies or body
parts.
This regulation is another indication of the government's
tightened control of the country's organ transplant industry, after
its first regulation on human organ transplants took effect on July
1, explicitly banning the sale of organs and tightening approval
standards for transplants.
It is estimated that 2 million Chinese need transplants each
year, but only 20,000 operations are conducted because of a
shortage of organs. This has resulted in an illegal organ trade in
some regions.
Meanwhile, poor management of organ sources, sharing,
registration and monitoring of transplant patients had raised
concerns in the international community, Vice-Minister of Health
Huang Jiefu said in May.
Foreign media have reported that organs are taken from executed
criminals, but the Ministry of Health denied this in April, saying
most organs in China had been voluntarily donated by ordinary
citizens on their deaths, and a small number from executed
criminals who voluntarily signed donation approvals.
(Xinhua News Agency July 15, 2006)