Blood Donation Essay

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    would do anything to keep living. While there’s many people out there who don’t even care about other’s and aren’t willing to help them have a second chance. Organ donations is the process of giving an organ or a part of an organ for the purpose of transplantation into another person. It doesn’t take a lot to become an organ donor, blood and oxygen must flow through the organs until the time of recovery to ensure viability. Organ transplantation is one of the great advantages in modern medicine.…

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    Organ donations stimulate positivity for the terminally ill despite all the challenges that has arisen from prior casual events. Through the correlation of persevering the gift of life to extend one’s life duration period the organ shortage supply chain may not contribute much less withstands for unethical practice. The transplantation industry process may encounter various undergoes for the supply of organ before having a divine outcome. Organ shortages have become a problem for the…

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    Organ Donation Many people face an ethical decision to donate their loved one’s organs when they have passed on. These people have a difficult time making this decision. It is frightening to them to think that their loved ones heart, kidney and eyes will be removed from their body. Some of them find it hard to see them in the casket knowing that they are missing a part of themselves. This makes some people hesitant about allowing donation to take place. If everyone was a register organ donor, we…

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    the U.S. in 2010…[but] currently over 100,000 patients are still waiting for donations…” (Gormley. 2011). The topic of organ donation is contentious and controversial at best. While few can argue against the benefits to both individual and society of implementing organ donation programs, the means by which to accomplish such a feat are hotly debated in the medical, legal, ethical, and legislative spheres. Organ donation is defined as: “…the removal of tissues from the human body from a person…

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    What is organ donation? The definition of an Organ donation is the process of surgically removing an organ or tissue from one person and placing it into another person. This happens when a person’s organ has failed to work. An organ has a specific vital function. The heart, liver lungs, pancreas and intestines are solid transplantable organs. Other organs are skin, brain and spinal cord, skeleton, muscles, stomach, gall bladder, bladder, eyes, ear, nose, mouth, tongue, and nerves. One person…

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    Organ transplantation has been around for a very long time, interest within organ transplantation dates back to somewhere around the nineteenth century. But it wasn 't until a French surgeon named Alexis Carrel that developed a method of joining blood vessels together, that was when the transplantation of organs became a more realistic prospect around the world. The basic definition for organ transplantation would be the surgical removal of an organ from one person and its transfer to another…

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    Organ Donation Importance

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    Hundredths of thousands of people need organs around the world. However, the demand for organs is greater than the supply. A study shows that although ninety-eight percent of adults’ support organ donation, only forty eight percent are signed up to donate organs (U.S. Government Information on Organ Donation and Transplantation). Due to the shortage of a needed resource, the government should allow people to sell their organs on a market to meet its growing demand. Currently the only way to…

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    Organ Donation Case Study

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    available for transplants and the increase of kidney failure has created an epidemic of patients on dialysis who await a donor. As the current program of unpaid voluntary donors in North America is not adequate, many urge that compensation for organ donation could be a legitimate solution. The demand for a realistic resolution in organ transactions raises concerns on the breach of human integrity. This paper will explore the ethical dilemma of selling organs as commodities as morally acceptable…

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    America freely offers a wide variety of contraceptives, including implants, patches, pills, sponges, and rings. According to Our Bodies Ourselves, in the Griswold v. Connecticut case of 1965, the Supreme Court granted married couples the right to use birth control, although they were still unavailable to millions of American women. In 1972, birth control was legalized for all American citizens through the Baird v. Eisenstadt case. It wasn’t until the 21st century that the government started…

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    organs, whether it be during life or after, is honorable and plausible. Within the circumstances of each situation, however, donors must keep in mind that the ultimate goal is to give another individual their life, not for financial gain. The organ donation system that is used today is based largely on altruism, or the belief that people will selflessly help each other expecting nothing in return. Donors could be a family member, friend, or stranger, but they all have the common…

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