Organ Donation Essay

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    Organ Shortage

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    Matters: Uncovering and Combating the Horrors of the Organ Shortage The bottom line is that there are not enough organs available for the increasing amount of people who need them. Ever since the first ever organ transplant in 1954, people have been able to give and receive the gift of life, an organ, prolonging and saving the lives of thousands of people; and, with arising medical and technological innovations such as immunosuppressive drugs, organ transplantation is conducted in over ninety…

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    Morally Advocating in Nursing; Legal, Ethical, and Moral Obligations of the Professional Nurse Nurses routinely find themselves in moral and ethical predicaments. The moral convictions of a nurse may be tested when the family revokes the dying wishes of a patient, or a preterm neonate is denied resuscitation efforts due to organizational policy. The purpose of this paper is to identify the role of the nurse as a moral agent, incorporate skills and values inherent to ethical reasoning, and…

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    argues that people need to know that there is a vital necessity for more donors, as more donations would satisfy the demand for organs. Satel’s thesis is that donors should get some compensation, or incentives, to persuade more people to donate. Satel’s claim comes from factual data and personal experience. The data given is minimal but strong. At the beginning of Satel’s argument, she explains how the organ supply is parched, and it was hard for her to get a kidney transplant since the black…

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    Network for organ sharing transplant waiting lists die, as the number of allografts that become available do not meet the demand. Although selling organs for transplants can be highly dangerous the number of fatalities due to the lack of organs available for transplants would greatly decrease if selling organs for transplantations was legalized. People who do choose to donate organs should be able to make that choice alone, which would financially benefit them and decrease the sale of organs on…

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    important: fertility, organ transplants, and food additives. One ethical issue that will affect society in the next decade is fertility. Fertility is the ability to produce offspring in reproduction (“The Definition of Fertility”). There are many women that find it easier to become fertile than others; these others are put into the…

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    these challenges are no different from the kinds of challenges faced by patients and families in other industrialized nations. Organ donation has become a challenge the number of organs available for transplantation are extremely scarce so there are many people who need an organ transplant, but will never receive one. It is simply not possible to supply a transplant organ to all the people that have a medical need for a transplant. The ethics of human cloning has become a big issue in recent…

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    The first ever heart transplant was performed by surgeon Christiaan Barnard in December 1967 (American College of Cardiology, 2015) It was successful, however, the drugs given to him to suppress his immune system left him susceptible to sickness and he died 18 days later due to double pneumonia. Prior to his death, his heart had functioned normally and thus human heart transplants were now a reality. During the 1970s, the development of superior anti-rejection drugs made the transplant more…

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    John Harris proposes a system to counteract the rising rates of individuals dying because they were unable to receive an organ transplant. In order to maximize human life in the most just way possible, Harris proposes that everyone should be entered into a survival lottery. Within the lottery if you need an organ transplant for medical reasons you can receive one however there is a risk that you could be drawn in which you would serve as the donor for others. Everyone is entered thus causing an…

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    autologous blood donation. The doctor explained the following requirements for autologous blood donation: the patient can’t donate within 72 hours prior to surgery, no age limitation for autologous donation, must be in overall good health and no present heart conditions, autologous units must be prescribed by the physician, discontinue use of Tylenol, aspirin, and alcohol. Preoperative autologous donation has advantages and disadvantages. The advantages of autologous blood donation prevents…

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    Organ Transplant History

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    History of Organ Transplants The first organ transplants took place in 200 BC. A Chinese physician, Hua-Tuo, is said to have replaced diseased organs with healthy ones. He is also the first physician to use anaesthesia. Both of these are significant. Organs could be replaced and anaesthetics were available. Not much is recorded about organ transplants until the late 17th and early 18th centuries, when experiments with animal to human blood transfusions, skin grafts, and animal to human…

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