I'm preparing to spend next week in Cairo at the Donate Life Egypt 2025 International Transplant Week, where I'll give a talk on Thursday. But much of my preparation is for Wednesday, when something potentially much more exciting is scheduled.
Wednesday (Nov. 12) will be devoted to an attempt to reach a new Global Consensus on Emerging Ethical Frontiers in Transplantation: Innovations & Global Collaboration
I'll be involved in Working Group 4: Ethical Frameworks for Regulated International Collaboration
Co-Chairs
Prof. Alvin Roth — Stanford University, USA
Dr. Michael Rees — University of Toledo, USA
Prof. Marleen Eijkholt — Leiden University Medical Centre, Netherlands
Scientific Committee Liaison / Editorial Lead
Dr. Ahmed Elsabbagh — University of Pittsburgh, USA<
Members (alphabetical)
Dr. Ali Obaidli — Department of Health, Abu Dhabi, UAE
Dr. David Thomson — University of Cape Town, South Africa
Dr. Frederike Ambagtsheer — Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
Dr. Gustavo Ferreira — University of São Paulo, Brazil
Prof. Ignazio Marino — Thomas Jefferson University, Italy/USA
Dr. Juan Navarro — Leiden University Medical Centre, Netherlands
Dr. Lucrezia Furian — University of Padua, Italy
Dr. Manuel Rodríguez — UNAM, Mexico (President of SPLIT)
Dr. Mignon McCulloch — University of Cape Town, South Africa
Dr. Nikolas Stratopoulos — Leiden UMC, Netherlands
Dr. Vivek Kute — IKDRC-ITS, India
Dr. Wendy Spearman — University of Cape Town, South Africa
It may be a long shot, but my hope is we can reach some consensus to replace the longstanding dogma that countries should be self-sufficient in transplantation.
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