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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Monday, June 29, 2009

Brain Death Update in Japan

Japan has two health insurance systems: shakai hoken (best translatable as "society-person insurance") which covers employees in larger companies, and kokumin hoken or "citizen's insurance," available to employees of smaller companies as well as the self-employed. Each system requires monthly premiums based on income and covers 70% of health care costs, as well as 100% for certain groups such as children under 5. The other day I got a a new insurance card with an interesting feature: a place to sign on the back if I agree that my organs can be harvested if I'm ever declared to be brain dead. This is part of a new movement to update Japan's outdated definition of death, finally allowing for people to specify themselves as organ donors and providing guidelines for declaring when a person can be removed from life support in accordance with their wishes. Lawmakers recently revised an asinine law that prohibited anyone under the age of 13 from participating in any organ transplant operations, which required that all patients with these needs travel outside of Japan to seek care, or die.

Japan has been trying to revise its laws governing brain death.

4 Comments:

Blogger Adam said...

I got my card recently and didn't hesitate to write down total donor. So many times, Japan lags behind my conception of what modernity should be, so it was easy to write it down. My fiancé was (understandably) ignorant about my opinions. But at least I know there is one reasonable person in the house. That said, I hope I don't die, but at least I know that several people will benefit if I do.

6:58 PM

 
Blogger Joe said...

I would never hesitate to sign that and can't understand people that don't, they won't be needing them where they're going.

I'm not looking forward to having to pay for medical care :\ Good ole' NHS.

10:03 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Adam, yes, Japan being behind the West is a big part of their culture actually. If it's important to us now, it will be important to the Japanese in 15-20 years. Like how they're finally banning smoking, which started in the 1990s here (here being the US now, since I'm here -- weird, that). ^_^

Joe, I signed it for the good feeling that someone might benefit, but I am pretty sure no one would ever need my big gaijin organs. If they do and I have no further use of them, more power to them.

12:59 AM

 
Blogger SaschaB said...

the extra field on the insurance card is a god idea. in opinion polls almost everyone in my country favors organ donor and almost everyone is too lazy to get the extra card for organ donor...

7:29 AM

 

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