La Villa Spa

Donating organs, your thoughts.

LancsLad

Unstable Element
Jan 15, 2004
18,088
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In a very dark place
Hey LL. Was your spelling of lieberal above a pun? He just has easily could have been spouting con-servative rhetoric too.

It wasn't meant to be a pun, however, well spotted and good rejoinder. The Bear is basically apolitical or is that apathetic, I'm never sure. Either way ,he doesn't care.

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Haus

New member
Aug 13, 2010
34
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Beyond religious beliefs (which are beyond argument or discussion) I cannot conceive any reasonable argument against donation of every useful body part after death.

What the OP is really asking about is not organ donation, but dying and death, and how to control that when you're helpless and in the hand of your physicians and whoever has your power of attorney for personal care.

You do have such a person don't you? If you don't that's what you should be thinking about, not donation.
One is not helpless. There are well define rules on who can be a donor. For one, you have to be declared by two doctors. Two, the doctor only ask your next of kin when you are brain dead or if it is a cardiac death still on life support (very limited cases) after they exhaust everything to help you....so if they haven't even ask, they don't know if you will be a donor or not. Three, ususally it is not the doctor's role to ask, there is 'end of life' team that take care of the donation stuff.
 

good to go

Active member
Aug 17, 2001
2,395
4
38
toronto
Doctors used to have to take the hippocritical oath as a prerequisite but that is no longer the case now. I believe that if you want to donate then do so, but i am not for it if you do not subscribe to this thought.
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
24,460
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38
One is not helpless. There are well define rules on who can be a donor. For one, you have to be declared by two doctors. Two, the doctor only ask your next of kin when you are brain dead or if it is a cardiac death still on life support (very limited cases) after they exhaust everything to help you....so if they haven't even ask, they don't know if you will be a donor or not. Three, ususally it is not the doctor's role to ask, there is 'end of life' team that take care of the donation stuff.
Didn't you mean to respond to the OP who specifically laid out a scenario of himself as 'helpless patient'? Both your scenario and mine assume there are next of kin, and their relationship gives them powers—would that include your unmarried gay partner? Of how many years?—but his scenario is more like the anonymous accident-victim.

Thanks for clarfying there are doctors devoted to saving you who are apart from the medical team devoted to harvesting organs if they cannot, which does go someways to answering his question. Still and all, the issues have to do with care at the time of death, and have zero to do with how the dead meat is disposed of.

But it's compforting to me to imagine I won't be wasted in some hole in the ground, like some hamburger past its sell-by date.
 

Chivas Regal

A Fine Lickor !
Jul 5, 2002
946
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Omnipresent
www.chivas.com
What do I need them for? I have been registered for 25 years.
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
16,791
3,326
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Ghawar
I have an irrational fear of people taking stuff from me, ( as many people do ) but the truth of the matter is that if it is not taking soon after your passing it goes to waste and eventually turns to dust.
In my previous incarnation as the Pharaoh all my organs were
removed upon death to preserve my body by mummification.
There was no pain felt I assure you. My organs did not go to
waste--they were preserved in jars. I wish I had donated them
for a noble cause.
 
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