Organ Transplantation Essay

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    Liver Transplantation Roy Franco Brown Mackie College NURS 2203 July 27, 2015 Mr. Nowicki Liver Transplantation The human liver is the largest organ in the body it is responsible for over 400 functions such as protein synthesis, blood clotting factors, processing of fats and cholesterol, metabolizing bilirubin, red blood cells, drugs and alcohol and also for storing carbohydrates (Merli, 208).When failure of the liver begins the necessity for transplantation of a non-healthy liver with a healthy

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    Organ donation is the surgical removal of organs or a tissue of one person to be transplanted to another person for the purpose of replacing a failed organ damaged by disease or injury. Organs and tissues that can be transplanted are liver, kidneys, pancreas, heart, lungs, intestines, cornea, middle ear, skin, bone, bone marrow, heart valves, and connective tissues. Everyone regardless of age can consider themselves as potential donors. After one dies, he is evaluated if he is suited for organ donation

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    ETHICS OF CADAVERIC ORGANS FOR TRANSPLANTATION The Ethics of Cadaveric Organs for Transplantation Brianne Vought HAS 545.01 Ethics and Health Care Advancements in medicine have allowed for the ability to transplant organs from a cadaver to a living patient. Immunosuppressive drugs have been developed to block the bodily rejection of organs from the deceased making transplantation possible. When an individual dies The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act allows for tissue and organs of the cadaver to

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    Organ transplantation has become a standard procedure within biomedical practice. The customary way in which organ transplantation is reported both within the practice and to lay media emphasizes that the “spare part” is a utility and does not have an existential existence of its own. Surgical success is not measured by whether or not the part has few implications for the phenomenological sense of being-in-the-body, but instead whether the part is immunologically accepted by the recipient and has

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    What if your doctor told you that your time was limited to less than six months, unless a compatible donor came along? This is what many people go through every day. They are put in the “National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network or OPTN” which is the transplant waiting list (Tara.B). Organs that become available through the OPTN are matched with the recipients. Here is where most of the people will wait months, years, or even the remainder of their life for a compatible donor to become

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    2009, there were 154,324 patients on the waiting list for an organ in the United States. Because of the lack of availability of organs, the grim reality is that only 18% received a transplant and 25 patients per day died while still on the waiting list. To alleviate this situation, a nationwide policy of compensation and incentives for organ donation will be implemented. The problems plaguing the current state of organ transplantation are more multidimensional than numbers. Issues are present from

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    successful organ transplant, thousands of recipients in the United States and throughout the world have had their lives extended and their health improved. Though organ transplantations have been very useful and successful, there are still major ethical issues surrounding the process. Fairly dividing resources has become very difficult because not everyone who needs organs transplant receive one. There is also a shortage of transplantable organs. To help minimize this shortage cadaveric organ donation

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    Organ transplantation has been one of the most riveting medical advances of the century as it literally gives the chance of a lifetime to patients with terminal failure of vital organs. This requires the participation of other people in society to donate organs from their deceased family or even donations from living individuals themselves. The increasing incidence of vital organ failure and the inadequate supply of organs has created a wide gap between organ supply and demand. This has resulted

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    Pulmonologist told you that your time was limited to less than six months, unless a compatible donor came along? This is what many people go through every day. Then they are put in the “National Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network or OPTN” which is the transplant waiting list (Tara.B). This is how organs that become available are matched with the recipients. This is where most of the people will wait months, years, or even the remainder of their life for a compatible donor to become available

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    The first successfully transplantation of an organ occurred in 1954, and since then the rates of organ donation have increased substantially (Welbourn, 2014). However, a big discrepancy exists between the amount of available organs and the quantity of people requiring one to survive. Thus, legislations have been made to minimize such discrepancy. Different countries have diverse copying mechanists on how to overcome this issue. Currently, Canada has the opt-in system in which any individual that

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