Bill Coon is a two time heart transplant recipient, one time kidney recipient, and organ donation advocate. When asked why he became an advocate of organ donation, he simply replied, “Without organ donation, I wouldn’t be standing here today. I have been saved by the miracle of organ donation twice in my lifetime.” When waiting in the hospital for his new organs, he comments on how incredibly important the machine he’s hooked to is, slipping away from the machine would simply end his life. After his realization and how important organ donation is, he vowed to write about his experiences in his journal until the day he received his new heart and kidney, as he wanted others to realize what it felt like to be living off of a machine. First most,
Joy Victory 's "Need an Organ? It Helps to Be Rich" provides great factual evidence to support her main claim that the rich have more advantages for acquiring an organ than do the poor and uninsured. The extensive factual evidence includes a personal account of an uninsured organ candidate, statistics and multiple expert testimonies to indicate that many variables hinder the poor and uninsured from receiving an organ. One of the most important variables is the socio-economic status of the potential organ recipient because statistics and evidence indicate receiving organs is determined primarily on a financial basis. Also, the article suggests the uninsured and poor not only suffer from physical ailments but also from a lack of hope for obtaining an organ. One of the ways Victory uses factual evidence is by narrating a personal account of an uninsured 34- year-old who is not only suffering physically but also suffering from a lack of hope for obtaining an organ. Brian Regions, the uninsured 34- year-old, is physically in agony every day with congestive heart failure and is consistently facing insufficient health care (Victory 736). As Victory accurately points out, Regions is not the only uninsured individual who is at risk for his expensive physical problems. It is also reported that there are thousands of others who are in physical agony with incurable heart damage (Victory 736). Without future heart support and financial intervention, Regions and many others may
By offering money, more individuals would readily give up their organs. This would lead to a surplus of organs for transplants. However, an increase in the price of organs would limit those who could afford surgeries. Although selling organs benefits the donor, the patients suffer from money concerns in addition to their original medical issues. One item frequently reveals the corruption of society: money. The process of organ transplants should hold the ultimate aim of saving lives, not the selfish bribe of gaining wealth. Other methods, such as providing life or health insurance, would be less materialistic options for encouraging organ donation. Currently, organ donation only offers the donor a personal feeling of well-being. Jennifer Bard discusses the corruption after researching about organ transplants at the Texas Tech University School of Law. Bard analyzes,“... it has so far been prohibited to offer any financial incentive for registering as a donor or to families of individuals who choose to allow donation after death… no solution to the reluctance of Americans to donate can work until this reluctance is taken seriously and the families who choose not to donate organs are listened to with respect” (121-122). Patients face drastic amounts of debt from medical bills. Rather than exchanging money for organs, help should be offered to ailing patients. Authors from the
Do you really know what the prohibition era? The prohibition era was indeed the banning of alcohol but it was also a creation to many problems. It solved men becoming violent to others but also created a way for the mafia to create a profit from the alcohol. Such as al Capone himself he inherited a bootlegging business from one of his former boss Johnny Torrio. One of the most famous murders from al Capone’s organizations was the valentine’s massacre. Production of any alcoholic beverage was illegal.
Wilkerson was not executed until May 1879, in spite shooting being upheld by the court as a method of execution. Some public dissent against the mode was noticed, as evidenced by one of the daily newspapers:
Imagine you are laying in a hospital bed connected to multiple machines, IV’s and monitors. The only thing keeping you alive is the heart and lung machine, the team of doctors, nurses and specialist. Even with the help of modern medicine you will only remain alive as long as you stay in that hospital bed; attached to those lifesaving machines. Even with the help of those machines your life is not guaranteed. Now imagine knowing that the only thing that can save your life is a heart transplant, and having to wait your turn on a very long list to get one.
The medical industry had been achieving more in the stage of medical advancements, though they are still in the early phase. Artificial organs have been one of those achievements. Although they have achieved such, artificial organs are not perfect. Most doctors as well as patients would prefer to replace a dying organ with a compatible human organ, rather than with an artificial or animal organ. Yet due to a there being less organs donated than recipients, artificial and animal organs are becoming more common in transplants. Most of this issue is because people are unaware of how organ donation works, the organs that can be donated, how many people are in need, and the advancements that have happened in the field. Organ donation saves hundreds of lives every year, but many lives are recklessly lost due to a shortage of organ donors.
Nelson Delson, memorizes things by having a method of shuffling a deck of cards at every new altitude when climbing a mountain. By doing so it helps him memorize things and it trains his brain to remember. Michael Mirski also has a similar technique to Nelson but his technique involves putting objects and images with certain suits and numbers while using the playing cards.
In the United States alone, 120,000 men, women, and children are currently waiting for a transplant of some kind (“Organ Donation”, 2013). In order for someone to be considered an organ donor, blood and oxygen must flow through all organs until time of recovery to make sure that they are still usable. Donation can occur between two circumstances: deceased patients can give their heart,
D. Thesis - Organ donation and Transplants are the most remarkable success stories in the history of medicine. They give hope to
According to United Network for Organ Sharing (2017), “Over 118,440 people are waiting for an organ transplant in the United States, a number on the rise over the last decade.” In fact, “Every day more than one person is added to the national transplant waiting list, and many people die every day waiting for a heart, liver, kidney or another vital organ” (UNOS, 2017). As the transplant list continues to increase in the United States, the demand for registered organ donors is significantly high. However, one single donor can significantly decrease the number of people waiting on the transplant list. For instance, Moritsugu (2013) describes the case of Donna Lee Jones, whose organs were donated after her death. Jones organs provided others with a new opportunity of life, as a matter of fact a man in Florida received her heart, a teenage boy in Washington DC, received a kidney and a pancreas, a hospital custodian received her other kidney, a woman in Pennsylvania received her liver, and one of her corneas went to a young lady in Baltimore, and the other one to a government worker (p. 245). By donating her organs, Jones was able to save and improve six people’s lives and gave them a second chance. This is a perfect example of how being a registered organ donor and donating your organs can significantly help and save
Day after day, families across the country are hoping and praying that a loved one receives the organ donation he or she necessitates. However, the waiting list for organs is rapidly increasing because there is a large demand for organs than the supply. "In 2012, 95,000 American men, women and children were on the waiting list for new kidneys, the most commonly transplanted organ. Yet only about 16,500 kidney transplant operations were performed that year" (Becker and Elias 222). Although some people become lucky and receive the organ they need, most patients die waiting for an organ. Many individuals are oblivious to the importance of donating organs. Being an organ donor is extremely beneficial because donating organs could possibly save a plethora of lives. Certain organs that are able to be donated while the donor is still living, such as the kidneys. In recent years, countless doctors, sociologists, and economists have heavily debated whether or not compensating donors is morally and financially acceptable. Additionally, there are people who believe the patient who receives the organ should reward the organ donor with money. On the other hand, some of the population believes that organs should be donated out of pure kindness while expecting nothing in return. Because people are expected to donate their organs out of kindness and care, there will never be enough organs available, due to people’s selfishness. If people were given material value after donating organs,
Across the country, sick men, women, and children wait for new chances at life: donor organs. A young woman, chest riddled with cancerous tumors, learns that in order to survive she needs new heart within the next year. A grandfather, withered and jaundiced, slips slowly into a coma as years of heavy drinking take their final toll. A tiny infant, born with underdeveloped lungs, lies motionless in an oxygen-rich, tank-like crib as his mother holds his minuscule hand and prays he will hang on just a little bit longer. Some patients wait for hours, months, or even years before an organ becomes available and they are given a
Transition: Though many have heard of organ donation, some may be unfamiliar with this alternative medical approach.
“In 1998, Adam Vasser, a 13-year-old teenager who loved playing baseball, was vacationing in Montana with his family when he suddenly came down with what felt like the flu. When he had trouble breathing and his ankles became swollen, his parents took him to a nearby clinic where the doctor on duty checked his vitals and sent him directly to the hospital across the street. By the time the family arrived at the hospital a few minutes later, Adam was in complete heart failure. For months, Adam waited in a hospital for a heart transplant, during which time his heart was only able to pump with the assistance of a left-ventricular assist device (LVAD). “It was the size of a washing machine and it had two tubes that went through my chest into my left ventricle to help it pump blood,” Adam, now a 30-year-old teacher in the San Francisco Bay Area, recalls. “My official diagnosis was idiopathic viral cardiomyopathy. Meaning, basically, a virus of unknown origin had attacked my heart.” Four and a half months after getting sick, Adam underwent a heart transplant that saved his life” (Wen). Without the generosity and kindness of people like the person mentioned in the story who donated their heart, many people will die due to the lack of organ donations. Many people believe removing organs before and after death to be morally and ethically wrong. Donating organs is a noble step that potential donors should be fully informed about (“Organ Donation Pros”). Here we will
The common emergency room in the United States constantly has a bustle of patients and family members, ranging from a child with a broken arm to a team of doctors and nurses attempting to race the clock as they desperately try to save a young woman’s life. Zoom in on the latter room and you will witness the rush as doctors try to stop the bleeding and nurses work vigorously to resupply the patient’s lungs with desperately needed oxygen. An hour passes, and although the ventilator still pumps air through the woman’s lungs as her heart faintly beats, she is declared brain dead. Her parents standing in the waiting room are approached by a doctor, who kindly breaks the news and walks away, hearing the sobs of these grieving parents fade into the background. Later, that same doctor comes to ask the family a possibly unthinkable question: would you consider giving consent for organ donation? The mother starts to cry again as the father thinks about their options and what they could do in this impossible situation. This became a reality for Linda and Michael Maiellano when their daughter, Katie was in a car accident in 2006 that left her brain dead and in critical condition. While Katie’s parents thought about organ donation, a young man only a few miles away was eagerly awaiting a new kidney and pancreas as they were his last hope of survival. Uncontrollable diabetes had left Gregory Kraus in a dire medical state with vision problems, nerve damage in his legs, and eventual kidney