Axulus
Veteran Member
What should really put someone at the front of the list is if they declared themselves an organ donor before their need for a transplant arose.
What should really put someone at the front of the list is if they declared themselves an organ donor before their need for a transplant arose.
What should really put someone at the front of the list is if they declared themselves an organ donor before their need for a transplant arose.
What should really put someone at the front of the list is if they declared themselves an organ donor before their need for a transplant arose.
A moral purity test that allows nothing for a change a heart, so to speak?
A moral purity test that allows nothing for a change a heart, so to speak?
It has nothing to do with morality but rather giving those who declare themselves organ donors a fair benefit for their contribution.
It has nothing to do with morality but rather giving those who declare themselves organ donors a fair benefit for their contribution.
And those who don't an unfair detriment for their not contributing? Sounds a little like extortion. Just around the edges.
Does this put us in a slippery slope? It doesn't have to no more than the prison system put us on a slippery slope.
No one is entitled to receive an organ.
Does this put us in a slippery slope? It doesn't have to no more than the prison system put us on a slippery slope.
That's bullshit and you know it! Of course it would put us in a slippery slope if we start questioning someone's right to life.
That's bullshit and you know it! Of course it would put us in a slippery slope if we start questioning someone's right to life.
The slope tilts the other way. The idea of a 'right to life' is recent and localised. But once we started talking about it as though it was real, it got a life of its own, and started spreading all over the place.
It's now so pervasive that we can, if we are not careful, forget that no such 'right' existed for the vast majority of human history. People could (and in many places, still can) be denied life on a whim, for any reason or none.
Since people die on the waiting lists this means someone died because of this.
No it doesn't. You are asserting facts not in evidence (that "someone died because of this").
One less heart was available for someone else who also needed one. By what mechanism would that not lead to a shorter life for someone else who needed a heart? An average of 21 people die daily while on organ transplant waiting lists in the US.
I was thinking not just a heart, but a compatible one.
Anyway this is interesting: http://www.pennmedicine.org/transpl...ansplant/transplant-process/waiting-list.html
One less heart was available for someone else who also needed one. By what mechanism would that not lead to a shorter life for someone else who needed a heart? An average of 21 people die daily while on organ transplant waiting lists in the US.
Loren's statement, and your assessment, assume a perfect system. If this particular heart had not been transplanted to this particular person, that does not necessarily mean that the heart would have been given to another person on the list, or if it had that the person would have lived/survived the transplant. Transplants, and the transplant system, are simply not that perfect.
If people are dying before they receive a transplant then giving an available organ to one person means that you are leaving another person to die because they didn't receive that transplant.
This is simply not supported by the facts or the math. By your logic, if 200,000 people receive transplants in a year, then 200,000 other people on the list die for lack of a transplant. This supposed 1:1 ratio of life and death is simply not the case for the transplant lists/system. According to the American Transplant Foundation (which you quoted), about 7% of the people die while waiting for organs. This is tragic, but clearly does not support the assertion that this particular transplant resulted in someone else's death, or that "giving an available organ to one person means that you are leaving another person to die because they didn't receive that transplant".
At the same time, out of every fifteen people who come in every day looking for cars, each day on average, one of them gets knifed by a street gang while they're walking to work and they die. This means that when you sell the car to one person, you are leaving the entire rest of the list in the group which has about a 7% chance of dying because they didn't get a car. A number of people in that group are going to die and they would not have died if they had been the one who got the car as opposed to having the other guy get the car.
Similarly, each time you give a transplant to one person, it leaves a group of people who could have received that transplant instead but did not. Some of that group are going to die who would not have died if they had been the one who received the transplant.
Does that make the person receiving the transplant responsible for those deaths? Is the transplant system responsible for those deaths? Has the recipient or the system committed manslaughter?
If the boy's name came up on the list, then the heart should have gone to him. Whether or not the suthorities believed he would take care of the heart is not a question. Whether or not AFTER THE FACT the boy makes bad decisions and dies anyway is not the question. Whether or not he was on the list and whether or not his name got to the top is the only question.
The list is the fairest way we have to allocate a scarce resource. We have to stick to the list. Future events not in our control must not sway us from that.
You are assuming that there was at least one recipient on the heart transplant list who would have been an acceptable match and could have undergone the surgery within the very limited time frame the heart was viable and that person did not get any heart.
That is not a safe assumption. Not only do organs need to be a good match histologicaly but also in terms of size. And also that any known risks in the donated organ are acceptable to the recipient and medical team. Add in a narrow time frame largely dictated by geography and it is not possible for us to know with any confidence that a better recipient missed a chance at a heart.
The only person we know who ended up dead from this transplant is Stokes. Mageth provided the statistic that 7% of the people on the list die before they receive a heart. Once again, you are literally making stuff up to support your position.That's what the doctors did. A PR campaign changed this, killing someone.
What should really put someone at the front of the list is if they declared themselves an organ donor before their need for a transplant arose.
The only person we know who ended up dead from this transplant is Stokes. Mageth provided the statistic that 7% of the people on the list die before they receive a heart. Once again, you are literally making stuff up to support your position.That's what the doctors did. A PR campaign changed this, killing someone.