Transplant

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    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

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    broken because the chances of receiving a donation are not equal. As well as for the principle of fairness, the rule that the family put on the organ donations makes it impossible for any other group of ethnicities besides Caucasians to receive a transplant. If the family were to place a restriction that the organs were to go

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    Organ donations are life-changing medicinal practice in which organs are expelled from a giver and transplant them to a receiver who is sick from an organ malfunction. China is a nation that practice organ "donation"; in any case, the way they get the organs are very unique from what we anticipated. China executes prisoners to take their organs and to use in transplants and to sell them. In an article, we understand that the Chinese government continues to illicitly gather organs from “innocent”

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    watch them deteriorate. According to the National Kidney Foundation there are currently 121, 678 people awaiting life-saving organ transplants. 100,791 of those are awaiting kidney transplants. 13 people die each day waiting for a kidney transplant and every 14 minutes someone is added to that list. In 2014, 4,761 people died, waiting for kidneys available for transplant. 3, 368 became too sick to receive it. Thousands of people are dying, because they can't get access to these vital organs, but

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    and for the more sensitized patients the waiting is long. For sensitized patient the transplantation is a nightmare, because even if they find a living donor candidate willing to give away a kidney, the recipient may not be able to receive the transplant due to the incompatibility of their donors. The shortage of kidney and many other organs for transplantation is the key factor that prolongs the waiting time, which is up to 5 years, and some patients may never receive the an organ. The shortage

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    for the phenomenological sense of being-in-the-body, but instead whether the part is immunologically accepted by the recipient and has functionality. However, many surgeries that are deemed successful in terms of service and function may result in transplant recipients feeling varying forms of psychic disturbance to their sense of self. These mindsets can range from feelings of unease

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    “Every 10 minutes, someone is added to the waiting list for an organ transplant and an average of 22 people die every day while waiting (“FACT SHEET: Obama Administration Announces Key Actions to Reduce the Organ Waiting List”).” Potential donors are often interested in donating a kidney, but are hesitant because their loved ones could need one in the future. Altruists are people who do not see any less value in a stranger’s life than in the lives of their loved ones. A stranger or acquaintance should

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    “Currently, the need for organs vastly outpaces the available supply, with over 100 000 Americans waiting on an organ transplant waitlist.” The waitlist is probably an underestimate of the actual need, as many who would benefit from transplantation are never listed due to dauntingly long waiting times. But every 10 minutes another name is added to the organ transplant waiting list. “Sadly, an average of 21 individuals dies each day since the organs they need are not donated in time.” (Statistics

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    an unwilling victim. People going about their business abducted and violated to make some extra cash, which could be obtained legally if compensation for donors were legal. In 2005, about one thousand two hundred people died waiting for a kidney transplant, something that could have been prevented if only there wasn’t an organ shortage. The shortage of organs can be tied to the financial devastation that organ donors often succumb to because of medical bills, loss of work, etc. Organ donors should

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    Every day, an average of twenty people dies while waiting for an organ transplant. As of November 14th,2017, 116,592 men, women and children are on the national waiting list for a transplant. For decades, many hearts, lungs, kidneys, livers and other organs obtained in the United States have come from patients who have been pronounced dead. Since many people are not signed up to be an organ donor, the brain-dead patient’s families are the ones to make the decision to give up their organs. Giving

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