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    The Human Organ Market

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    The Human Organ Market Over the past decade the number of patients in need of an organ transplant has increased dramatically. The shortage of organs each year increases the number of patients on the waiting list and has deprived many people from a new life. There are over 100‚000 Americans on the waiting list and overage 19 people did each day from the lack of an organ transplant (Abouna 1). Between the years 1988 to 2006‚ the number patients in need for a transplant has increased times six (Abouna

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    Organ Trafficking

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    GAC015 Assessment Event 4: Academic Research Essay Organ Trafficking Students Name: Mary Jin Student ID #: JPCH21571 Teacher: John Due Date: 2013.2.25 Word Count: 1164 Question: In many countries organ trafficking is illegal‚ yet the incidence is on the increasing. Examine the legal‚ ethical and sociological issues involved in procuring human organs for transplant operations‚ comparing two countries with very different approaches.

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    Organ Trafficking

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    Cause of organ transaction - money 1. Definition of organ transaction and black market. Such commercialization of human organs is called organ trafficking. There is clearly a market comprised of people who need money‚ and people of means who are willing to spend money for organs. It’s a black market‚ meaning the practice is wholly illegal and secretive. 2. Price of organ Here is the price of each organ in illegal organ transaction. Pair of eyeballs $1525‚ scalp $607‚ skull with teeth

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    Market for Human Organs

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    Market for Human Organs Richard Knox‚ a National Public Radio reporter (Richard Knox)‚ states‚ “About 75‚000 Americans are on the waiting list for kidney transplants. But in the coming year‚ just 18‚000 will get them.” Unfortunately‚ the transplant list is only growing with each passing year. This means that many people will die on the waiting list and those who are lucky enough to get to surgery may not be strong enough to survive the operation because they have been without vital organs for so long

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    legal to sell organs to transplant patients. How many live could be saved if this was allowed in the United States? An average of eighteen people die each day waiting for transplants that can’t happen because due to the shortage of donated organs. Every life that could be saved is extremely important and an effort needs to be made to preserve these lives. The sale of human organs should be legalized‚ solving the shortage of transplant organs in the United States. The history of organ transplants

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    Organ Donation

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    for organ donors and it’s very simple to become one and help save a life. Transplantation gives hope to thousands of people with organ failure and helps provide new life for those living on borrowed time. Introduction “Life is like an onion‚ you peel it off one layer at a time‚ and sometimes you weep.” (Carl Sandburg) By this time tomorrow‚ eighteen people would have died because they did not receive a lifesaving transplant. According to the United Network for Organ Sharing

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    Organ Donation-Support

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    Backgroung of organ donationin HK Despite medical advancement‚ organ transplant has become the only hope for some patients with organ failure in order to live on. However‚ the limited supply from donation of transplantable organs has made some 2000 local patients and their family waiting desperately‚ as the patients count their days in the fight against death. It is more regretful that many patients would die before the right organ match comes. To shorten patients’ waiting time for organ transplant

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    Organ Transplant

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    United States‚ a patient who wants an organ transplant from a cadaverous donor must become part of an elaborate nationwide organ distribution system. This system‚ known collectively as the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN)‚ is operated by the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)‚ an independent nonprofit organization working under contract with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. *Organ transplantation is the moving of an organ from one body to another or from a

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    Sale of Organs

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    realize the extreme cost involved in care of these patients. Legalizing the sale of human organs is a more effective practice in comparison to recent alternatives presented to increase the amount of organs donated. Since 1984‚ the buying and selling of human organs has been illegal in the United States. This prohibition on organ markets is very controversial. Deciding whether or not to legalize the sale of organs has been a huge topic plaguing the medical world for a very long time. Determining if the

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    Artificial Organs

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    of available donor organs provides little to no hope for patients wishing to have a chance at new life. According to the Texas Organ Sharing Alliance‚ there were 79‚466 patients on the U.S. National Waiting List as of January 1‚ 2002‚ with only 6‚148 donors in the country that year. In response to the organ shortage‚ scientists have made recent advances in transplant technology with the development of two new types of organ replacement: xenotransplantation and artificial organ replacement; the latter

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