Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,679,167 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Excerpts from a December 23, 2004 Boston Globe editorial commemorating the 50th anniversary of the first successful organ transplant.


"Fifty years ago during this week of gifts, a 22-year-old man gave life to his dying identical twin by donating one of his kidneys. The transplant allowed the young man to live an extra eight years. The donor is still alive, as is the Brigham surgeon, Dr. Joseph Murray
For the former commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, see Joseph Philip Robert Murray.


Joseph E. Murray (born 1 April 1919), American surgeon, performed the first successful human kidney transplant from an adult to his identical twin.
, who made medical history with the first successful organ transplant organ transplant: see transplantation, medical. .

In the half-century since then, medicine has made great advances in dealing with the body's natural tendency to reject transplanted tissue and in expanding the kinds of organs that can be transplanted. The chief hurdle now to this means of saving lives is the shortage of organs. That is why it was so disheartening dis·heart·en  
tr.v. dis·heart·ened, dis·heart·en·ing, dis·heart·ens
To shake or destroy the courage or resolution of; dispirit. See Synonyms at discourage.
 when the spending bill Congress passed early this month failed to fund a law enacted in April to encourage donations.

The Organ Donation Organ donation is the removal of the tissues of the human body from a person who has recently died, or from a living donor, for the purpose of transplanting or grafting them into other persons.  and Recovery Improvement Act would have funded education programs for the public and healthcare professionals on issues of organ, tissue and eye donations eye donation Transplantation The harvesting of decendents' corneas with deposition in an eye bank . It would have paid for programs to coordinate the activities of hospitals with qualified organ procurement organizations. The law would also have provided funds for transplant centers for organ procurement organizations to provide travel reimbursements and subsistence expenses for individuals making living organ donations.

The law's bipartisan sponsors, who included the Senate majority leader, Bill Frist (himself a transplant surgeon), and Senator Edward Kennedy, had sought $25 million for the law's first year. But while Congress appropriated billions for pork-barrel projects-including a groundhog groundhog: see woodchuck.  museum in Pennsylvania-the Frist-Kennedy law did not get its money.

Each year, advances in healthcare make it possible for more patients to be eligible for transplants, but the growth in donors fails to keep up.

That is why the funds for coordination between hospitals and organ procurement organizations would be particularly helpful. The trained coordinators can often be more effective in guiding the decision-making of grief-stricken family members than emergency room personnel can be.

The United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  will probably never achieve the nearly 100 percent donation rates of Scandinavian countries, but the initiatives outlined in the organ donation act would surely raise the rate and save lives. Congress should make funding this law a top priority next year."
COPYRIGHT 2004 Transplant Communications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Organ Donation and Recovery Improvement Act
Publication:Transplant News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 31, 2004
Words:360
Previous Article:Financial support for live donors, organ trafficking, stem cell research among major news events of 2004.
Next Article:Age should be considered in matching kidney donors with recipients.
Topics:



Related Articles
Frist, Durbin transplant bills would remove financial disincentives for live donation, create donor medal.
Legislation authorizing HHS to fund organ donation financial trials introduced in Congress.
American Society of Transplant Surgeons Statement on Solicitation of Donor Organs.(National Organ Transplant Act)
President Bush signs "Organ Donation and Recovery Improvement Act" into law; 14 year void ended.
Money's increasing role in attracting more donors, new transplant legislation lead stories in 2003.
HHS launches major effort to increase organ donation by getting largest hospitals to adopt "best practices".
UNOS Board requests special committee to study directed donation solicitations.(United Network for Organ Sharing)(Brief Article)
Senators Frist, Dodd begin bipartisan effort to get organ transplant act fully funded in FY 2006.(Organ Donation and Recovery Improvement Act )
HRSA seeks comments on live donor reimbursement demo program; $2 million in funding will be available.(Health and Human Services, Organ Donation and...
Commentary: Transplantation's most troubling year in a decade signals it is time to revisit NOTA.(National Organ Transplant Act of 1984)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles