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I also want to be donated as a cadavar. I learned tons from mine.
Recipients usually (not always, but usually) never return to any kind of meaningful employment and thus represent nothing more than a huge burden on society due to the immense cost involved in the procedure and the equally immense cost of the life-long medication regimen they must follow.
Me too. There probably isn't much they can take from me organ wise, but they are free to what they can manage. After that I'm being cremated anyway, so I plan to donate my body to science. I'm trying to find out what I need to do to have my kidneys donated to PKD research specifically however. I haven't done cadaver lab but I have friends who have and they say the cadavers are treated with the utmost respect and thats extremely encouraging.
I'm also a registered marrow donor and was a regular blood/platelet donor until I developed tachycardia. :sad:
From a purely utilitarian point of view organ donation is an enormous waste of time and money. Recipients usually (not always, but usually) never return to any kind of meaningful employment and thus represent nothing more than a huge burden on society due to the immense cost involved in the procedure and the equally immense cost of the life-long medication regimen they must follow. We all bear that cost through insurance premiums or taxation, and the recipient contributes nothing to society on the whole.
Would I want one of my family members to recieve an organ should they need it? Of course! Just saying is all...
I'll happily donate my cadaver so the next generation can learn. And admire my tattoos.
Many of our organ recipients do very well. They do return to work, go to college and some of the younger ones will marry and even have children. Some of the famous actors have returned to their acting jobs after receiving an organ such as a liver.
Who has the right to put a price on someone's life although our insurance companies do try?
As well, there are many different parts of the body that can be used besides the major organs which include the heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and intestine. The tissues used include bones, tendons, cornea, heart valves, veins, arms, and skin.
As well, having that organ donor card may help your loved ones through the process of removing your body from life support especially if "cardiac death" might be used rather than "brain death" as a criteria for removal.
Same for all of the above except the PKD, though it looks like I might need to come off the marrow list. Like most others here, once I'm done with my body, someone else might as well get something out of it.
IMO, once they see Organ Donor, they give up too soon. To each their own.
IMO, once they see Organ Donor, they give up too soon. To each their own.
IMO, once they see Organ Donor, they give up too soon. To each their own.
I disagree; not once in 30+ years in this business has organ donation been mentioned until the patient has been pronounced. We certainly don't worry about it the field; working a code is time-consuming enough as it is without rummaging through wallets to look for a driver's license or donor card. As for me, since I don't need it, they can have it. (especially since my sister-in-law desperately needs a pancreas...) I'm see-sawing on cadaver donation, but that's for personal reasons that I don't want to get into in this forum.
Me too. There probably isn't much they can take from me organ wise, but they are free to what they can manage. After that I'm being cremated anyway, so I plan to donate my body to science. I'm trying to find out what I need to do to have my kidneys donated to PKD research specifically however. I haven't done cadaver lab but I have friends who have and they say the cadavers are treated with the utmost respect and thats extremely encouraging.
I'm also a registered marrow donor and was a regular blood/platelet donor until I developed tachycardia. :sad: