Organ Donation and Transplantation
Organ Donation and Transplantation
Organ Donation and Transplantation
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Transplantation is a big step forward in the service of human science, and many
people today owe their lives to an organ transplant. One of the ways to cultivate a true culture
is organ donation to ensure health and even life for the sick, who sometimes have no other
hope. Organ donation is one of the most important components of transplantation, which can
be defined as a voluntary procedure for donating one's organs and tissues in favor of an
Technical Aspects
recipient by implanting the tissues, cells, part of an organ, entire organs, or blood. However,
the heart is an organ that cannot be taken from a living being and is rarely donated
posthumously. To solve this problem, in 1982, Dr. Robert Jarvik invented the first artificial
heart implant that required the patient to be attached to a 350-pound air compressor and live
in the hospital for 112 days (Nordham, 2021). Even though the procedures can be intravital or
posthumous, surgeon practice proves that living donors' items are usually healthier as
transplanted within minutes of removal. Along with this evidence, the deceased donor's
organs can save people's lives by keeping them cold outside the body.
screening both parties for viral infections and mental health problems aiming to prevent
rejection. Rejection is the recipient's immune system reaction of recognizing the transplanted
organ as foreign material, frequently resulting in the transplant organ's destruction and even
fatal cases (Hertl, 2023). However, as practice shows, perfectly matched item types can also
provoke patient complications. Thus, clinicians conducting transplantation pursue not a rare
perfect match but a close match applied with immunosuppressant therapy. Such therapy
effectively targets all parts of the immune system with different drugs suppressing, making
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the transplantation process less affected by the degree of matching (Hertl, 2023). For that
reason, transplantation items do not necessarily belong to an identical twin whose genes
exactly match the person's, as modern technologies have made it possible to take tissues even
from a different species. Therefore, transplantation technologies have developed over the
centuries, creating opportunities for modern surgery to transplant and challenged state
Public Policy
Despite the history behind organ donation and transplantation being short in years,
operations conducted before success in 1954 were experiments resulting in failure that shared
stereotypes about the inhumanity and ethnicality of such actions. The cause has become an
transplantation from mythology into reality. The first step to government involvement in
transplantation was made owning to regulation and organization has helped transplants gain
widespread acceptance among the public. The National Uniform Anatomical Donation Act of
1967 allowed individuals to donate organs and tissues for transplantation at death (Nordham,
2021). As a result, several transplant centers and "banks" providing individual responsibility
for finding donors, restoring organs, and ensuring the logistics of donors have arisen in the
United States. The perpetual success of organ donation has encouraged other countries
around the globe to develop this policy. Till the end of the 20th century, the National Organ
Transplantation Act established a national network for organ allocation and data collection on
to survive, provoking the high evaluation of demands for donors' items. Since 1988, over
800,000 transplants have been performed in the United States (Nordham, 2021). However,
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the fact that the number of willing recipients is higher than that of donors creates new
challenges for state governments. The Office of Health Resources and Services, the US
Department of Health and Human Services agency, has announced a Modernization Initiative
that includes several measures to increase accountability and transparency in the Organ
Procurement and Transplantation Network (HRSA, 2023). This instrument allows patients to
observe details about organ procurement, waitlist and transplant outcomes, and organ
donation and transplant demographics of individual transplant centers and organ procurement
organizations. The initiative also involves doubling the United States budget for agency-
related work to $67 million (HRSA, 2023). The main problem of current transplantation is
the shortage of organs, causing patients who were in turn for an organ transplant to die.
Personal Opinion/Conclusion
practice, which is actively developing today, introducing new technologies and ideas into
other medical areas. Today, both adults and children living around the globe need transplants
as the only trace leading to life, but many of them will never have such an opportunity.
Therefore, the value of this procedure is determined by its nature to save people's lives and
fates. On the other hand, the modern world still faces society's negative attitude towards
associated with saving lives but with stories about kidnapping and selling organs. Lack of
resources to survive causes people to become criminals. This state of affairs emphasizes the
medical field and legislation as the milestone of implementing the policy. Feeling scared
about others' lives, both parties, including donors and recipients, are afraid to become victims
The achievements of modern science open up limitless prospects for doctors to save
one person by transplanting organs or tissues of another, but the ethical complexities cannot
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be condemned. Ethical principles from six workable theories include autonomy, beneficence,
nonmaleficence, justice, fidelity, and veracity. In my opinion, fairness, fidelity, and veracity
are fundamental criteria that comply with the current healthcare policy. As the ethics
transplantation is the development and respect of human dignity, where human life can only
be an end but never a doctor's tool. Beneficence or do good can be considered as the most
difficult moral task for doctors. Respectively, transplantation aims to save the patient's life
and, in fatal cases, to give hope to other people on a "waitlist" for donation.
almost every person on the operating table can automatically become a donor after death. The
humane goal of prolonging and saving the recipient's life loses humanity's status when the
means of achieving it harms the life and health of the donor. Self-determination or anatomy
determines the presumption of consent to become a donor. Frequently, doctors neglect this
principle, as the sooner organs or tissues are removed from the deceased body, the greater the
transplantation can be justified only with the independent donor's consent as a gesture of fully
References
Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). (2023, March 22). Hrsa announces
HHS.gov. https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2023/03/22/hrsa-announces-organ-
procurement-transplantation-network-modernization-initiative.html
https://www.msdmanuals.com/home/immune-disorders/transplantation/overview-of-
transplantation
Nordham, K. D., & Ninokawa, S. (2021). The history of organ transplantation. Baylor
https://doi.org/10.1080/08998280.2021.1985889