Fundamental rights
Personal liberty
Right to medical aid
Not just Indian citizen
Our Action
The Supreme Court of India, on December 5, 2022, directed the Indian government to review the organ transplant law and ensure uniformity in it's implementation throughout the country.
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Our Action
A PIL was filed in the Supreme Court of India by an NGO regarding the ambiguity in the organ transplant law. The Court directed the Indian Government to bring "UNIFORMITY " in the Organ Transplant Law across India.
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Our Action
The High Court of Gujarat has declared the Gujarat government's policy of mandating a "Domicile Certificate" for the registration of cadaveric organ transplants as illegal and unconstitutional.
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Individual and collective actions are being taken in the form of representations, writ petitions and Public Interest Litigations (PIL) in the larger interest of organ donors, recipients and their families.
Actions are being taken to bring uniformity, transparency, and reform in The Transplantation of Human Organs & Tissues Act and Rules to achieve the goal for which the law was introduced in the first place - to stop commercial transactions and illegal buying and selling of organs.
Representation
For individuals
Writ Petition
For a group of people
Public Interest Litigation
For the larger interest
To provide for the regulation of removal, storage, and transplantation of human organs and tissues for therapeutic purposes.
Prevention of commercial dealings in human organs or tissues or both and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto.
Our mission is to promote a clear, consistent, and unambiguous implementation of The Transplantation of Human Organs and Tissues Act, 1994 and the Transplantation of Human Organs and Tissues Rules, 2014 in every hospital across India. We aim to ensure that every patient is able to access organ transplantation without facing any legal complexities or inconsistencies.