odette is marking time.he organ wasn't suitable. the emptiness is just very, very, very, very big. it's just like... there's nothing that anybody can do about it, i understand that. and there is nobody to blame, basically. so it'sjust like — what do you do? she's one of 6,500 people waiting for a transplant of one kind of another, around a50 of them die each year. transplant teams know they need more organs, so the government in england wants to assume we are all willing to donate. an approach already adopted in wales two years ago, with scotland also planning to follow suit. but already the way teams identify donors and how they approach grieving families has been transformed, that's seen the number of operations increase by more than 50%. the story of transplants in the uk over the past decade has been one of success — more people are having operations and more people are willing to donate their organs. but there are those who worry that if we move to a system of presumed consent, well, that could actually