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This is the fifth of a series on human organ donation/transplantation I will be posting on this blog. Why will I be doing this? Because I am convinced that the transplantation of human organs is BIG BUSINESS. While it illegal to buy and sell human tissue and human organs for transplantation, it is legal for individuals to donate their tissue and organs to be transplanted into other persons who desperately need such transplanted tissue and organs in order to live a better life and in many cases, such transplanted tissue and organs are necessary for the recipient to stay alive.
While it is illegal to buy and sell human tissue, donated tissue and organs when transplanted in recipients produce a lot of money for the doctors making the removal or the insertion of tissue and organs and for the medical facilities, hospitals or clinics. Transplant operations can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Obviously then it is not unreasonable to describe the medical practice of removal and/or transplantation as BIG BUSINESS.
According to Transplant Living, the average total cost of a single heart transplant in 2007 was $658,800. This figure includes the cost of obtaining a donor heart, at an average of nearly $90,000, about $23,000 in evaluation fees, $40,000 for doctor’s fees, $383,000 in hospital costs, $93,000 in post-operative care, and over $29,000 for immunosuppressive prescription medications. Transplants that involved both a heart and a lung cost an average of $874,800, while heart and kidney combination transplants cost an average of $758,700.
Donors of tissue and organs act out of compassion. The same cannot be said of the health care industry. Example: last year the Chinese government brought charges against local officials in the western region of China who were systematically putting political dissidents in prison and then executing them in a mobile medical facility where their tissue and organs were removed and shipped throughout China where wealthy Chinese paid hundreds of thousand dollars for organ transplants. That practice is not confined to China but is present more or less in many countries.
While such a violation of human rights probably does not occur in the United States, there is illegal trafficking in tissue and organs. What immediately concerns me is the suspicion that the interest of the health care industry and tontos utiles promoting legislation such as the currently pushed Texas Senate Bill 303 and the Texas House Bill 1444 is that such legislation promotes the ‘third way’ for passive euthanasia. Simply put, it is so easy for trained health care personnel to have a naive patient check off boxes on a document like a POLST document that both authorizes withdrawal of treatment (including nutrition and hydration) and the donation of the patient’s organs. George Orwell is probably nodding his head when he hears some proponents of ‘palliative care’ push their agenda; he warned us to look behind the meaning of words.
– Abyssum
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ORGAN DONATION
by Tom Scheve
http://science.howstuffworks.com/life/human-biology/organ-donation4.htm
Donating Blood and Body
In addition to organs, you can also donate tissue, blood stem cells, blood and platelets, and even your body.
Tissue is composed of layers of cells that function together to serve a specific purpose. It must be donated within 24 hours of death. Some types of tissue donations include:
- Cornea: One of the most commonly transplanted tissues each year (more than 45,000) is the cornea
. The cornea — a transparent covering over the eye — is the eye’s primary focusing component. A cornea transplant restores sight to recipients blinded by an accident, infection or disease. Corneas can be transplanted whole or in parts and require no anti-rejection drugs in the recipient
. Corneas from a 75-year-old donor are just as effective as younger corneas.
- Bones: Donated bones can be used to replace cancerous bones in the arm or leg in lieu of amputation.
- Skin: Among its many uses, skin can be used in grafts for burn victims or for post-mastectomy breast reconstruction.
- Veins: Donated veins are used in cardiac bypass surgery.
- Other donated tissue includes tendons, ligaments, heart valves and cartilage.
Blood stem cells are immature blood cells that can produce more blood-forming stem cells, or mature into white blood cells, red blood cells or platelets. Blood stem cells can be taken from bone marrow, the bloodstream or the umbilical cord. Stem cells within bone marrow — the spongy tissue inside of bones — produce blood cells. Donated bone marrow can be infused into the blood stream to fill cavities in depleted bones and resume production of normal blood cells.
The most common donation made is blood and platelets. In addition to donating blood for others, you can also donate blood to yourself before going into surgery. Donated blood (after being screened for disease or abnormalities) is separated by blood type and can be transplanted whole, or separated into plasma, platelets or red blood cells.
You may donate your full body to science (or more precisely, the research institute or university of your choice) by legally inserting the wish to do so in your will. Full body donations are used for training doctors, studying the human body and perfecting forensic research and investigative techniques. In most cases, organs cannot be removed from a body that is to be used for research purposes. At the time of your death, the institute is notified, and a representative will inquire about the cause of death and the state of the body to determine if the donation can be accepted. Funeral ceremonies are often encouraged, but require a slightly different embalming process. Afterward, the body is shipped to the institution.
Getting the right organs to the right person is a complicated process. What organizations help streamline organ donation?
Body Farms
Body farms are secured, outdoor facilities where bodies are left for different lengths of time — buried, partially buried or exposed to the elements. These bodies teach forensics students how to determine factors such as length of death, whether a body has been moved and even if it has been previously frozen. Students observe the effects of decomposition as well as insect activity on bodies. Body farms can also be used to train dogs to search for cadavers.
Currently, there are only two body farms in the United States — at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, N.C. A third is opening soon at Texas State University-San Marcos.
