Close Menu
New Delhi PostNew Delhi Post
    What's Hot

    Dawood in Cricket: Lalit Modi’s Claims Revive Questions Raised by ‘New Delhi Post’ Months Ago

    USA Immigration Policy: How Trump Has Turned Border Politics into State Power

    Police Reform at 20: What Has Changed, and What Has Not

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    New Delhi PostNew Delhi Post
    Subscribe Friday, June 5
    • HOME
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • STATECRAFT
      • CENTRE
      • EAST
      • WEST
      • NORTH
      • SOUTH
      • NORTHEAST
    • WORLDVIEW
    • PERSPECTIVE
    • CONVERSATION
    • LIFE & STYLE
      • BOOK
      • FOODIE
      • ART & CULTURE
      • GLAMOUR
      • HEALTH
      • RELATIONSHIP
      • TREND
      • TRAVEL
    • MISC.
      • BEYOND FILTERS
      • DIASPORA
      • EARTH
      • ECONOMY
      • EXPLAINED
      • FUTURE
      • NEWSMAKER
      • OFFBEAT
      • PLAYING TO THE GALLERY
      • SPORTS
      • SCIENCE & TECH
    • Magazine
    New Delhi PostNew Delhi Post
    Home»Misc...»Beyond Filters

    Why women dominate organ donation, and what it says about Indian society

    New Delhi PostBy New Delhi Post
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email WhatsApp

    A National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organization (NOTTO) study, between 2019 and 2023, 63.8 per cent of living organ donors in India were women, while nearly 70 per cent of recipients were men. More than 36,000 women donated organs, but fewer than 18,000 received transplants. Men, in contrast, received nearly 40,000 organs.

    On paper, this is a dataset. In reality, it is a stark reflection of who gives, and who gets to live.

    At its simplest, the story is this: in India, women are conditioned to be givers at every stage of life. That expectation does not end at emotional labour or caregiving. It extends, quite literally, to their bodies.

    India’s transplant ecosystem relies heavily on living donors, which means these decisions are rarely abstract or institutional. They are made at home—across dining tables, in quiet conversations, within families. And in those moments, medicine recedes while social conditioning takes over.

    “The majority of living donors are women. They are wives, mothers, daughters,” says Dr Sunil Shroff, a pioneer in organ donation awareness.

    Why is it so? When a serious illness strikes, families do not begin with neutrality. They begin with an unspoken hierarchy of roles. Who will step forward? More tellingly, who is expected to? A wife donating a kidney to her husband is seen as natural. A mother to her child is unquestioned. A daughter to her parents is expected. The language used to describe these decisions reinforces the illusion of choice: she wanted to help, she chose to give, anyone would have done the same.

    But these choices are shaped within a framework of expectation. The reverse—men donating to women—exists, but without the same inevitability. It is less assumed, less socially encoded. And when families face financial or emotional strain, priorities emerge. Men, still widely viewed as primary earners, are often treated as more “urgent” to save.

    As nephrologist Dr Vivekanand Jha notes, access to transplantation in India is deeply influenced by “socioeconomic and gender factors”. In practice, that means a man’s illness can trigger immediate mobilisation, while a woman’s illness may be met with hesitation, delay, or compromise.

    This is where the imbalance becomes impossible to ignore. The system draws disproportionately from women as donors, yet invests less in their survival. Women are less likely to be referred for transplants, less likely to be waitlisted, and less likely to receive organs—even within their own families.

    The disparity is not dramatic or visible. It is quiet, routine, normalised. Bioethicist Dr Anant Bhan describes such decisions as being shaped by “expectations, obligations, and power imbalances.” In other words, they are presented as free choices, but rarely exist outside social pressure. This is how inequality operates most effectively, not through coercion, but through internalisation.

    India’s transplant infrastructure has expanded. Awareness has improved. Policies have evolved. But the deeper question remains largely unaddressed: not how many organs are donated, but whose bodies are expected to give, and whose lives are prioritised to receive.

    Because beneath the statistics lies an uncomfortable truth. In this system, women are not just caregivers. They are givers by design. And when survival itself becomes a question, it is still being quietly decided along the fault lines of patriarchy.

    New Delhi Post
    New Delhi Post
    • Website

    "New Delhi Post" is a news portal empowered by a dedicated team of innovative and investigative journalists, writers, editors, designers, photographers, technicians and reporters.

    Keep Reading

    Inside the Machine: How Algorithms Reproduce India’s Social Hierarchies

    Beyond Market Noise: Why Arbitrage Funds and Defence Stocks Are Finding Favour

    Waste, Minerals, Climate: Why India Needs a Corporate-Led Reset

    India’s Uncounted Exodus: Climate Migration Haunts the Sundarbans

    The First Decline: Inside the Global Cognitive Slowdown

    Cosmic Chanting @ 100: An Evening of Devotion Bridges Souls to the Divine

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • About Us
    • Exclusive
    • statecraft
    • worldview
    • perspective
    • conversation
    • Life & Style
    • Misc.
    • Magazine
    • Get In Touch
    • About Us
    • Exclusive
    • statecraft
    • worldview
    • perspective
    • conversation
    • Life & Style
    • Misc.
    • Magazine
    • Get In Touch
    © 2026 New Delhi Post. Designed by Rynow Infotech . All rights reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.