Many people are simply reluctant to donate their bodily parts. In response to the shortage, proposals have come forth advocating the sale of non-vital human organs.” (Andre, Claire, and Manuel Velasquez. " Organ Selling and Transplants." Organ Selling and Transplants.)…
“Organs for Sale” is an argument written in response to the on-going ethical debate of a market-based incentive program to meet the rising demands of organ transplants. With many on the waiting list for new organs and few organs being offered, the author, Sally Satel, urges for legalization of payment to organ donors. Once in need of a new kidney herself, Sally writes of the anguish she encountered while facing three days a week on dialysis and the long wait on the UNOS list with no prospective willing donors in sight. She goes on to list several saddening researched facts on dialysis patients survival rates, length of time on the UNOS wait list, and registered as well as deceased donor numbers. While Sally is…
In addition, the writer also uses emotional appeals in the article. By stating that only less than 50% patients receive a kidney and thousands of patients die because of the lack of kidney, Alexander aims to use pathos to arouse the readers’ sympathy for the patients. Forbidding compensation for kidney donators and the selling of kidney is a main reason for the lack of kidney because people consider the kidney donation as “a crazy act of self-sacrifice” and the donators as “saints” (Berger). Pathos helps the writer seek agreement with the readers through…
Dr. Lickerman thinks that people become heroes by the consent to personally sacrifice to help others. Dr Lickerman has a patient who has many different medical problems and believes that he is a hero. “What makes him a hero is that fifteen years ago, before he got sick, he donated one of his kidneys to his brother who had AIDS. “ Dr Lickerman thinks that this patient is a…
Efficient risk bearing hints that it is better to give employees fixed salaries, while incentive considerations lead to the conclusion that it is better to tie pay to performance. (Brickley, Smith, and Zimmerman, 2009). Thus a well-designed compensation plan should be able to reflect the trade-offs between these two.…
Many people find organ donation a challenging topic to consider, a bit like talking about death. Possibly this is because at the time one or more people are receiving a donor’s kidney or heart, another family is undergoing a tragic loss. Organ donation is the act of donating an organ by a person so that it can be transplanted by surgical procedure in the body of the recipient. Organ donation can benefit many people from death or any other critical conditions. A person already dying can save someone's life by donating his or her organs.…
If the users of technology are properly informed and are consistent with morality, they are capable of utilizing and managing high-tech tools in an appropriate way. Nowadays, technology has a greater power to handle difficult diseases, which brings hopes and confidences for patients and their families. Belkin in her essay presents the story of Henry, who endures the pain of Fanconi anemia and faces the danger of losing life at any time. Her mother, Laura never has a thought of giving up her son on account of her humanity. She says: “We hoped. We believed. We were brave. We persevered. And despite all that it didn’t work. I am left with my belief system intact. I believe in love and science. Nothing more, nothing less”(Belkin 16). Humanity is a precious virtue that refers to being loving and caring towards people, plants and animals. It is a human nature, which can be aroused when a person plays a certain role in society. For instance, parents like Laura always embraces the faith of protecting her children all the time no matter what disasters happen to them. A mother’s instinct is Laura’s motivation to persist in curing her son. The application of technology enables her to regain hopes over and over again. Bone-marrow transplant and its related researches become the backbone for parents to develop their humanities…
Good morning/afternoon fellow delegates. My name is Drew Becker, and I am representing Staten Island Academy today. I would like you to take this moment to think. Imagine that a loved one has just been severely injured in a car accident. The injuries include brain trauma, broken bones, but most notably, a loss of two pints of blood, that your friend is in desperate need of. Coincidentally your blood type matches. Picture yourself at the scene of the accident. Put yourself in the hospital waiting room, anticipating news from the doctors, hoping that your friend will survive. What would you say when the doctor approaches you and tells you that in order to save your friends life, you must donate. Now hold that thought with one more element added. You were in the car, however you were not as lucky as your friend. You are now a victim token by the car crash. Wouldn't you still hope to save a friend's life as your last wish? Would you give any other organ necessary for your friend's survival? Your heart? Your kidneys? Your liver? It's a matter of life and death. If you had designated on your driver's license or carried some other means to communicate your decision to be an organ donor, your friend’s life could have been saved.…
Every single year 4,000 people die waiting to receive a kidney alone. Thousands more die waiting on the organ donor list. It is the desperate need to survive that has caused people to do immeasurable things, even if it’s illegal. The organ sales on the black market is a very real thing. Obviously, there is a great need for organs, so is the global market for organ sales the answer? This is a complicated and delicate question to pose because many believe that a for profit system cannot exist without exploiting the poor and underprivileged. However, is the need for the market so great that society should be willing to take that risk? Is the fear of death so great, that you would go to jail in order to keep living? This paper will portray different…
According to the National Health Service, there are two types of organ donations, living and deceased. Nobody realizes what the numbers are and how many there are suffering. “Currently, nearly 124,000 men, women and children are awaiting organ transplants in the United States.” (Organ 1) According to The U.S Department of Health and Human Services, a person is added to the list every ten minutes. 79 people every day are saved by organ donation. (Need1) However, 22 people die waiting for a transplant because of a shortage of organs. (Need 1) Everyone will die one of two ways, either their heart will fail, or they will go brain dead. Many lives could be saved if people would step up and help. One 13-year-old girl helped saved 8 lives after passing from a brain hemorrhage. Jemima Layzell told her parents she wanted her body to help save others in the event of her death. “Her heart has gone to a five–year–old boy, a 14–year–old was given her lungs and her liver helped two boys, aged 10 months and five. Two people received her kidneys, a man was given her pancreas and her small bowel went to a boy, three.”(Teenage1) People who are willing to donate have a huge heart.…
By the time this day ends approximately fifteen people will have died needlessly. Not due to car crashes, gang violence or drug overdoses. Surprisingly they will have died from the simple act of waiting. They died while waiting for a much needed organ donation to replace their failing organ. For days, weeks even months they had hoped to receive news that somebody, somewhere had selflessly volunteered to donate their organs upon their death to another human being living on borrowed time. That news never came and time ran out. Perfectly good organs were buried with another non-donor who had no use for them anyhow because that person was already dead, yet without agreeing to give up their organs upon their death another life will be lost. Everyone can help to save lives by donating your vital organs after you have passed away. You will have no further need for them and I promise, you won’t even notice they are gone.…
Thesis: Organ and tissue donation isn’t just an important decision for yourself, but it can also impact and save the lives of so many more.…
Another astounding story, which I encountered during my stay in Crumlin, again, emphasizing the strength and power of faith, I got to know a little girl named Laura who was suffering from a rear and serious disease. Her only chance of recovery appeared to be a blood transfusion from her five year old brother who had miraculously survived the same disease and had developed the antibodies needed to combat the illness. The Doctor explained the situation to her little brother, and asked the little boy if he could be willing to give his blood to his sister.…
Not everyone in the world is fortune enough to get a treatment for a series condition that the one have. Culture play a big role in the explanations behind induvial refusing lifesaving treatments. Synonymous of culture revolves around ethnicity, nationality and language. For example, patients with certain ethnicity and beliefs such as, Jehovah’s witness and their refusal on any form of blood transfusion or blood products, based on biblical verses. In a paper by Professor R Macklin, He discuss a two standard case studies of Jehovah’s witness that needed a blood transfusion. The first case study was a competent adult patient that refused a treatment that potentially save his life. In spite of that, the respect of person’s principles endorses the physicians to conform with the expressed wishes of the competent adult patient even if the anticipated repercussions are hostile and vault. The competent…
Erik Larson uses this simile to communicate to his readers how awkward Burnham felt during this occasion. Burnham considered himself incompetent, especially since he was not able to get into Harvard or Yale and these men were able to go to these schools or schools like them. Compared to these highly trained architects, Burnham felt as if he did not belong there. Furthermore, by comparing this occasion with “being a stranger at someone else’s Thanksgiving,” Larson’s readers can comprehend how little and unwelcome Burnham was feeling sitting next to professional architects with a high level of education. By using this simile, Larson is able to describe how Burnham felt during this dinner.…