Persuasive Speech Outline Topic: Organ Donation General Purpose: To persuade Specific Purpose: After listening to my speech my audience will consider donating their organs and tissues after death and to act upon their decision to donate. Central Idea: The need is constantly growing for organ donors and it is very simple to be an organ donor when you no longer need your organs. Introduction: How do you feel when you’re waiting for something you really really want? Or what if it’s not even
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Bibliography: The Ethics of Organ Transplanting: The Current Debate‚ Arthur Caplan‚ 1998‚ pp. 41-43. The Encyclopedia of Health‚ Dale C. Garell‚ M.D. General Editor‚ Jeffrey Finn and Eliot Marshall‚ 1990‚ pp. 67-69‚ 95-97. 133-135. The Nicholas Greene Effect: A Boy ’s Gift to the
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BODY There are 120‚000 people on the waiting list to receive an organ transplant. Each day about 22 people die from either waiting or cannot find a correct match to get a transplant. In a year span over one thousand lives were taken. Even if they are able to find a match. If that was you or someone you loved that was on the waiting list wouldn’t you want someone to donate? TRANSITION: They still have a slim chance that the new organ would not
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a Life TOPIC: Organ Donating ORGANIZATION: Problem/ Solution SPECIFIC PURPOSE: I would like my audience to believe that acquiring information about organ donating will save lives and encourage people to donate. INTRODUCTION: I. Attention Getter: You have the ability to save lives by simply dying. What am I talking about? I am talking about organ donors. According to the official U.S. Government web site for organ and tissue donation‚ about 74 people receive organ transplants each
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transplant human organs‚ such as kidneys‚ corneas and hearts‚ into human beings who would die otherwise. At this very moment‚ 48‚000 people are waiting hopefully for organ transplants (Tenery 20). Seven of these unfortunates will die each day because there are no organs to be had (Hans 84). For them the wait is over. Today‚ I’m going to tell you why you should become an organ donor and perhaps
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Clayton Vossler Miss Orsich Research Paper 19 February 2014 A Market for Organs Imagine being the parent of a four year old girl who needs a heart transplant. If she receives a heart‚ she will live a long‚ healthy life. Without it‚ she may not live through the year. A parent would do everything and anything to make sure she received a new heart. Put her on a waiting list‚ a year seems like plenty of time. But the weeks slowly turn into months‚ and months turn into a year and the baby girl loses
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very stressful and emotional situation‚ it prolongs every single day. According to Susan Aldridge’s article “Organ transplants” more than 121‚000 people are waiting for an organ transplant in the United States today. Sadly‚ over 6‚500 people have died waiting on an organ transplant. If broken down‚ it results to eight people dying each day (Aldridge 606). Kidneys are the most common organ transplant‚ with the intestine being the least common. A transplant procedure may range from the liver‚ heart
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List”‚ states that there is an extreme lack of organ donors in this society. “70‚000 Americans are waiting for kidneys‚ according to The United Network for Organ Sharing” and “only about 16‚000 people received one last year. “ In large cities‚ where the ratio of acceptable organs to needy patients is worst‚ the wait is five to eight years and is expected to double by 2014 “. There is no reason why the wait should be this long because any one can be an organ donor and Satel does a great job of explaining
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In the article “Death’s Waiting List” Sally Satel argues that the sale of organs should be allowed in the U.S. She hopes to convince the reader that the only guarantee of getting a transplant is to skip the wait list and just buy one. Although Satel makes a good argument she seems very biased and provides biased evidence to support her claims. Satel claims that there is a problem with organ donations. In order to prove this she begins her argument by stating that the wait for a kidney in a big
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J Bus Ethics (2014) 121:315–328 DOI 10.1007/s10551-013-1723-1 Roche’s Clinical Trials with Organs from Prisoners: Does Profit Trump Morals? Judith Schrempf-Stirling Received: 17 August 2012 / Accepted: 5 April 2013 / Published online: 17 April 2013 Ó Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013 Abstract This case study discusses the economic‚ legal‚ and ethical considerations for conducting clinical trials in a controversial context. In 2010‚ pharmaceutical giant Roche received a shame award
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