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Liliya Pороva, Svitlana Pороva, Hrуhorii Krainyk, Iryna Bandurka y Olena Fedosova
About the need to introduce a presumption of consent for organs transplantation and other  
 
human anatomical materials
In absolute numbers, this is only 130 operations per year, despite the 
fact that more than 5,000 Ukrainians need organ transplants every year. 
Of these, more than 2,500 patients need kidney transplants, up to 1,500 
patients need liver transplants, more than 1,000 patients need heart 
transplants, and 300 people need bone marrow transplants.
The number of people in need of surgery is growing steadily, and 
most of them die without waiting for a transplant. Of the 5,000 people in 
need of a transplant, about 3,400 die each year. O. Shklyarska (2017:15) 
quotes: “Every day in Ukraine, nine people die without waiting for a 
transplant.” Those who are lucky are sent abroad by the state, spending 
millions of hryvnias to pay for the services of foreign doctors. With the 
funds that Ukraine transferred to foreign clinics for the treatment of our 
citizens in 2013-2015 ($ 2.431 million and 612.2 thousand euros), 6 bone 
marrow transplants, 8 heart transplants, 5 liver transplants and 18 kidney 
transplants were performed. With a well-established transplant system in 
Ukraine, 1122 heart transplants could be performed with these funds, 116 - 
liver and 5623 – kidney (Shklyarska, 2017).
A few words need to be said about the norm of the following content, 
which is enshrined in Part 5 of Art. 13 of the Law of 17.05.2018: “If the 
recipient is in an urgent condition, which is a direct and imminent threat 
to his life, medical care with the use of transplantation is provided without 
the consent of the recipient, his parents or other legal representatives.” 
According to A. Gel, the norm is as follows: rst, it restricts the personal 
non-property rights of the recipient and his parents (legal representatives) 
in terms of the right to consent to medical intervention, and secondly, 
directly contradict the requirements set by the legislator in Part 2 of Art. 43 
Fundamentals of the legislation of Ukraine on health care (1992) (Consent 
to medical intervention). We quote this rule: 
The consent of the patient or his legal representative to medical intervention 
is not required only in the presence of signs of direct threat to the patient’s life, 
provided that it is impossible for objective reasons to obtain consent for such 
intervention from the patient or his legal representatives (Fundamentals of the 
legislation of Ukraine on health care, 1992: n/p)
Thus, the legislator explicitly determines that the implementation of 
medical intervention without the consent of the relevant entity is possible 
only if there are two necessary conditions: a) the presence of a direct threat 
to the patient’s life; b) the lack of objective reasons to obtain such consent. 
We share the opinion of A. Gel that this is exactly the wording that the 
legislator should have used in constructing the norm enshrined in Part 5 
of Art. 13 of the Law of 17.05.2018. At the same time, the norms of special 
medical legislation do not look very correct, which directly contradict the 
requirements of the Fundamentals of Legislation of Ukraine on Health Care 
- the basic legislative act that denes legal, organizational, economic and