Should you become and organ donor Visualize this you’re walking down Las Vegas Boulevard in the early morning when you are suddenly succumbed by unconsciousness and abruptly abducted. Amongst regaining consciousness, you find yourself restrained and lying on a table with someone surgically removing your kidneys and liver for resale on the black market. This sounds like a twisted plot in a horror movie correct? Now this may seem highly unlikely but the reality exists. This may not be happening on the streets of Las Vegas but these abductions do occur. The demand for organs is at a critical rate. The patients who need them may become desperate and turn to such acts to save their life’s. Now there is something we …show more content…
You have the choice to help these individuals and make miracles possible. Organs that can be donated include heart, kidney, liver, intestines, pancreas, cornea, bone marrow, bone, and skin. Organdonor.gov states there are currently over 119,000 men, women, and children on the organ waiting list, and that 22 people die every day awaiting a donor. The national transplant waiting lists for donors is not biased every patient is placed on this list and when an organ that matches your protocol becomes available their life saving blessing is delivered. Most people don’t realize there are over 2000 children under the age of 18 on this donor list. According to an article in the Anesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine it states, “Unfortunately the demand for organs continues to exceed the supply of donors and many patients die before a suitable organ can be identified.” pg.315. Each year the month of April symbolizes an important milestone for this cause. April is donate life month, during this month it is encouraged that people register as organ, eye, and tissue donors. Now that you are mindful of how common organ donation is, I want to eradicate some common fears and misunderstandings associated with organ …show more content…
These include immediate family’s response, hospital care for donors, religious attributes, funeral arrangements post donation. Immediate family response to organ donation and should come as no shock to them, in the British Medical Journal article “Organ Donation” written by Paul J Frost, Stephen Leadbeatter and Matthew P Wise it states, “Donation may provide some comfort to grieving family and have a beneficial effect on the bereavement process.” Pg. 1097. Hospital care for donors is no different than that of a non-donor, in the article “Organ donation: Don't let these myths confuse you” the Mayo Clinic states “When you go to the hospital for treatment, doctors focus on saving your life — not somebody else's. You'll be seen by a doctor whose specialty most closely matches your particular condition.” par. 5. Religious attributes and organ donation do not seem to be an issue, and it is looked upon as a great generosity, Organdonor.gov states, “Most major religions in the United States support organ donation and consider donation as the final act of love and generosity toward others.” par 3. Another common misunderstanding is funeral arrangements for people who have donated organs Donatelife.net educates us by stating, “An open casket funeral is possible for organ, eye and tissue donors. Through the entire donation process the body is treated with care and respect. Funeral arrangements
According to United Network for Organ Sharing (2010) organ donations and transplantation are the removal of organs and tissues from one person and placed into another person’s body. The need for organ transplantation usually occurs when the recipient organ has failed (UNOS, 2010). Organ donation can save the lives of many individuals who are on the waiting list for an organ donation. Becoming an organ donor can be a difficult decision. Many people have the false beliefs about being an organ donor. An example would be if organ donor is on their driver’s license and a person is in a life-threatening accident everything will not be done to save their life. There is an increase need for organ donors and unfortunately the need for organ
Please try and consider the following situation. You’re sitting in an emergency room, waiting for your dad to awake after falling into liver failure, costing him to need a new liver. Not knowing if it’s possible, crossing your fingers. You wish you could help, but you can’t. Someone else can. An organ donor. According to organdonor.gov, about 116,000 U.S. citizens are waiting on the organ transplant list as of August 2017. To put that number into perspective, that’s more than double the amount of people that can fit into Yankee Stadium. And to make matters worse, 20 people each day die waiting for a transplant.(organdonor.gov) Organ donation can offer patients a second chance at life and provides
1. If I agree to donate my organs, the hospital won’t work as hard to save my life: When you go to hospitals for treatment, doctors focus on saving your life, not someone else’s, and the doctor in charge of your care has nothing to do with transplantation.
In living organ donation, before a donor can donate there are tests administrated to see if the donor is suitable to donate. There is an evaluation of the donor done to make sure that no physical, psychological, or emotional harm will happen to them before, during, or after donating (Organdonor.gov U.S. Government Information on Organ Donation and Transplantation). In living organ donation, most donations happen within family members, or between close friends, although there are stranger donations that happen. Living organ donors should generally be physically fit, in good health, and between the ages of 18 to 60. They should not have a history or have diabetes, cancer, high blood pressure, kidney disease, or heart disease
Many people have the false assumption that organ donation is against their religion. Most religions actually support it. Organ donation is giving the gift of life to somebody else, and that is one of the best things you can do. Not only is it
By this time tomorrow, 12 people in America who are alive right now will be dead.
Every day, 20 people die because they are unable to receive a vital organ transplant that they need to survive. Some of these people are on organ donation lists and some of them are not. The poor and minorities are disproportionately represented among those who do not receive the organs they need. In the United States alone, nearly 116,000 people are on waiting lists for vital organ transplants. Another name is added to this list every 10 minutes. This paper will argue that organ donation should not be optional. Every person who dies, or enters an irreversible vegetative state with little or no brain function, should have his or her organs-more specifically, those among the organs that are suitable for donation-harvested. A single healthy donor who has died can save up to eight lives (American Transplant Foundation).
Every two hours someone dies waiting for an organ transplant. 18 people will die each day waiting for an organ. One organ donor can save up to 8 lives. . THE NEED IS REAL
Main Point 2: Myths, we have all heard some, we have all believed some. But right now, I am going to set the record straight about some of the misconceptions surrounding organ donation. Organdonor.gov will tell you about many facts and myths about organ donation. So let’s start with money. I’m sure you have all heard that when a someone donates their organs, their family has to foot the bill for all it. That is completely false. There is no cost to donors or their families for organ or tissue donation. Hence the word “donation”. The donor won’t be able to have
In February 2003, 17-year-old Jesica Santillan received a heart-lung transplant at Duke University Hospital that went badly awry because, by mistake, doctors used donor organs from a patient with a different blood type. The botched operation and subsequent unsuccessful retransplant opened a discussion in the media, in internet chat rooms, and in ethicists' circles regarding how we, in the United States, allocate the scarce commodity of organs for transplant. How do we go about allocating a future for people who will die without a transplant? How do we go about denying it? When so many are waiting for their shot at a life worth living, is it fair to grant multiple organs or multiple
Every thirty minutes someone gets added to the waiting list for an organ transplant (‘Frequently Asked Questions”). Not only that, but the number of patients being added to the waiting list is growing larger than the number of donors (“Organ Donation Statistics”). Many people are in the need of some kind of organ donation, so anyone who donates can help to save many lives. Organ donation is also such a great way to give back to people. Another thing is that to donate an organ a person does not have to pay money (“Organ Donation FAQ’s”). The only part that costs money is for the funeral if they are a deceased donor (“Organ Donation FAQ’s”).
According to the US Department Health & Human Service website a person will be added to the donor list every 10 minutes (Why Donate?, 2014). What if one of those individuals were in your family? Wouldn’t you want others to offer a life-saving opportunity to you? While making the choice to donate any organ is difficult you have the power to offer the needed organ to your own family or another family that may be losing hope.
Tayt Andersen is an 8 year old boy from Rigby, Idaho, but he isn’t like all the other little kids in Rigby. Tayt was born without the left side of his heart. And, at just seven years old, he has had nine open-heart surgeries, twenty-four shunt revision surgeries, and three other life-saving surgeries. He has been Life Flighted ten times, flat-lined six times, and has spent more than three-fourths of his life in hospital beds at Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Embree)
About seventy-Four people a day receive an organ transplant, however an average of seventeen people die each day waiting for transplants. Did you know that more than 88,000 men, women and children currently await life-saving transplants? Every 12 minutes another name is added to the national transplant waiting list. Of those 88,000 waiting, 61,000 of them are waiting for a kidney. How many of you reading this are organ donors? I use to feel that I didn't want a doctor taking anything from me after I have passed, even knowing that two of my family members, an uncle and cousin, had severe kidney disease. It wasn't until after they had passed away that I really thought seriously about organ donation. I'm not proud of my prior
A topic that continuously remains relevant in our world, but seems hardly discussed is organ donation. Organ donation is a medical procedure that treats deteriorating organs by replacing them with donated ones. For example, my best friend’s younger sister died last year due to a brain trauma making her death was completely unexpected and tragic. The doctor’s told her family that she was completely brain dead and would never wake up again. So, her parents made the decision to donate her organs. Because of that decision, she was able to save six lives. For four of those people, that was their last chance at life. Furthermore, organ donation is a widely controversial because there are multiple sides of the issue.