Maki (10-20-2013)
I'll give you my heart mint. <3
When we get our drivers license here they ask if we want to become organ donors, but I guess a system that has everyone as a donor unless they opt out is a better system.
Maki (10-20-2013)
Elaborate on this?
& Thanks @(you need an account to see links), you got my back
She was being half sarcastic, half serious.
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Referring to countries where private (shady) organ sales/transplants exist; typically where state-regulated organ donor programs are insufficient.
People can sell their organs under the table for hard cash, or have organ "dealers" collect off others' body parts - much like selling drugs.
Just imagine back alley/basement operation rooms where people are getting hacked open,
or some shady doctor whose lost his medical license, operating with garage tools and kitchen utensils as exaggerated imagery.
Sociopath (10-20-2013)
Basically what Mod said. People in the US can go over to some where like China where you can buy organs more freely.
It depends on the country. It's been a long time since I've watched the documentary I watched but I remember an American guy dropping something crazy like $300k on a heart. It was from an executed prisoner. The executions over there happen much, much more and therefore supply for organs is higher. I looked it up and it's now illegal to sell to organs in China but I think the law was "open to interpretation" at the time of this documentary. The guy took out a loan and I think it was very clean and done in a respectable hospital. But @(you need an account to see links) is right. Some places it's really sketchy/dirty and people sell kidneys for macbooks type thing or to pay their bills.
They probably changed the law because of the documentary...but it probably still goes on. It had a heavy focus on how clean it was to do in China. I can't imagine a place like that wasting money off someone they were going to execute anyways.
I'm all for it and it should be opt-out only on religious grounds. Having a family friend who has cystic fibrosis receive a lung transplant 2 weeks ago and seeing the improvement already I don't see why people wouldn't want to help give someone a second chance.
has anyone read "unwind" before?
it's a book set in a society where some teenagers are forced to become organ donors (when they're alive)
and how some of these people try to escape their fate
Maki (10-22-2013)
I heard of the cases from my friend who are EMT telling me (they been told my their senior staff) whenever there is an catastrophic accident (survival chance is less than some %), they sometimes check your licenses to see if you are an organ donor. If you are, they probably won't attempt to rescue you. I know it's going to sound cruel and immoral, but just pointing that out. I'm also opt out for organ donor. Hopefully stem cell project will evolve one day to the point we will no longer need donation from another person.
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As a former EMT, I assure you this is bullshit. You work to save every person you can, and you usually don't go through their wallets to find their insurance cards/driver's license until you have them stabilized and on their way to the hospital.
I worked as an EMT for three years, and I never checked to see if they were an organ donor.
That being said, motorcycle accidents and car accidents are great candidates for organ donation because they tend to otherwise have been very healthy and young. And if you ride a motorcycle and have your brains are smeared on the pavement, the rest of you is still fine!
There are no girls on the internet.
Maki (10-22-2013)
Banannie (01-15-2014)