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When Are You Dead?

Hugh Pickens writes "Dick Teresi writes in the WSJ that becoming an organ donor seems like a noble act, but what doctors won't tell you is that checking yourself off as an organ donor when you renew your driver's license means you are giving up your right to informed consent, and that you may suffer for it, especially if you happen to become a victim of head trauma. Even though they comprise only 1% of deaths, victims of head trauma are the most likely organ donors. Patients who can be ruled brain dead usually have good organs, while organs from people who die from heart failure, circulation, or breathing deteriorate quickly. But here's the weird part. In at least two studies before the 1981 Uniform Determination of Death Act, some 'brain-dead' patients were found to be emitting brain waves, and at least one doctor has reported a case in which a patient with severe head trauma began breathing spontaneously after being declared brain dead. Organ transplantation — from procurement of organs to transplant to the first year of postoperative care — is a $20 billion per year business, with average recipients charged $750,000 for a transplant. At an average of 3.3 donated organs per donor, that is more than $2 million per body. 'In order to be dead enough to bury but alive enough to be a donor, you must be irreversibly brain dead. If it's reversible, you're no longer dead; you're a patient,' writes David Crippen, M.D. 'And once you start messing around with this definition, you're on a slippery slope, and the question then becomes: How dead do you want patients to be before you start taking their organs?'"

516 comments

  1. I have an organ donor card... by jawtheshark · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... and I'm surprised that anyone is surprised by any of this. Frankly... If I'm braindead, or even slightly above braindead so that I can breathe myself, just kill me, mm'kay? There is no way in hell that I'll ever be "me" again. The "me" is dead, and that zombie-corpse-thing is not "me" anymore. Help others, save the financial cost and emotional burden to my family (even though I live in Europe, I expect the financial cost to be low... )... Take them, help someone. I am dead if my neocortex is not functioning correctly anymore.

    --
    Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    1. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's a section in the article that states the Beating Heart Cadaver (BHC) still feels and responds to pain, yet no anesthetic is administered because the BHC is not considered to be a person anymore. I am canceling my organ donor card.

    2. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And headless chickens still run around. What's your point? If your brain is dead, reflexive reactions to pain from your spinal cord certainly aren't enough to warrant anesthetics.

    3. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 0

      There is no way in hell that I'll ever be "me" again.

      How do you know what treatments will become available tomorrow?

      --
      Deleted
    4. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FIne, stick a gun in your mouth. Who knows what treatments will be available tomorrow? Idiot. What do you think is realistically possible anyways?

    5. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Sad+Loser · · Score: 5, Insightful

      IAAD and sometimes diagnose brain death - a lot of this academic debate ends up just scaring people or firing up various religious groups who have a problem with donation (but often have less of a problem with receiving donated organs).

      It is good to have this debate, but like abortion, this is an area where people who deal with the messy situations that life provides should get to drive the policy, rather than any particularly flavour of god-botherers.

      --
      Humorous signatures are over-rated.
    6. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, to carry it further, if I'm braindead but still breathing, keep me alive long enough to find new hosts for my organs at least.

    7. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree completely, but I was a little surprised by the tests we apparently use to determine brain death. I assumed there might be an EEG to check for brain activity, but apparently they give you a wet willy and poke you in the eye, then turn off your air for a little while.
      I'm cool with all my parts going into other people once brain death occurs, but I guess I'd just like them to check a little more rigorously to be sure it has occurred.
      The article offers something of a solution: don't sign the card, but provide your family with instructions that your organs are to be donated after enough tests have been run to be sure your brain is kaput.

    8. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Xugumad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I work on a research campus, that helps...

      Seriously though; it would be nice to believe that a miracle-cure for massive brain injuries is just around the corner (or in fact, a miracle cure for pretty much anything serious), but realistically you have to weigh your odds, and I don't like them. If I'm that much of a vegetable, I wouldn't want to hang around hoping..

    9. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Zakabog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. People always say "Well what if they don't revive you and you could have been saved!" Honestly who cares? At the point of no return (my organs are being removed) I'm dead anyway! I'm not going to be sitting around for years looking back and thinking "Oh man I wish those doctors tried harder to save me" I'll be dead. Then anything they want to do with my body after that (organ donation, filming another Weekend at Bernie's) is completely up to them. I'd prefer to be useful to someone after death and telling me that there's a chance I might not be fully 100% dead before they officially pronounce me dead just because i'm an organ donor isn't going to change that.

    10. Re:I have an organ donor card... by orzetto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How do you know what treatments will become available tomorrow?

      You cannot put back a soul into place once the brain matrix has rotten. The lungs or the heart may be restart, but it is no different than a computer with a fried CPU in which the cooling fans are still spinning. And no, you cannot repair the "CPU", because it would involve rebuilding trillions of neural connections that are unique to each human being and define, directly, who they are. Even in a far, far future in which you could repair these connections you would not know what to do since no one would bother (or afford) to take a backup of their own soul in case of trauma, and in such a sci-fi world rebuilding the body from scratch would probably be easier.

      Brain death is irreversible, you don't come back from that. If something comes back, it will be a vegetable, not the original person.

      You could just as well cure a T-Rex fossil.

      --
      Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
    11. Re:I have an organ donor card... by rampant+mac · · Score: 1

      "How do you know what treatments will become available tomorrow?"

      How do you know the Earth won't be consumed by fire tomorrow?

      --
      I like big butts and I cannot lie.
    12. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree - massive head trauma - please - dont try. Maybe when the EXPERIMENTAL miracle cures have been tried (failed many times and been fixed and we KNOW they work) then Ill reconsider - but till then = NO THANKS

    13. Re:I have an organ donor card... by russotto · · Score: 5, Informative

      Brain death is irreversible, you don't come back from that. If something comes back, it will be a vegetable, not the original person.

      If you RTFAd, you'd find out that one person who was certified brain dead and whose organs were about to be harvested DID come back and was not vegetative. You can argue that they weren't really brain dead, but that just moves the argument up a level to how you determine brain death.

    14. Re:I have an organ donor card... by realityimpaired · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How do you know what treatments will become available tomorrow?

      If I'm braindead today, who cares what becomes available tomorrow? Maybe if a viable way to restart brain impulses after brain death occurs, I'll reconsider having signed my organ donor card. Anything could happen, I suppose, but I'm doubtful that technology will happen in my lifetime. As it is, I have signed it, and I have made a living will which states clearly that if I'm brain dead they're to line up organ transplant recipients and terminate life support. I'd rather give others a chance at life than continue to exist as a vegetable in the hopes that they might, maybe, some day come up with a way to undo that damage.

    15. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can't keep you on life support forever, because they need room for other patients. I recently had to take a family member off of life support due to him being declared brain dead from severe head trauma, but if I hadn't, the hospital would have for exactly that reason.

    16. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hentes · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Not necessarily. There are people who seem braindead but they are awake, and some others can wake up from a comatose state. The diagnosis of brain death tends to be inaccurate.

    17. Re:I have an organ donor card... by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not sure why you're not modded up yet.

      The whole article argues that we don't really know when someone is "dead" yet in the cases outlined; just best guesses by doctors.

      Would you trust a doctor from 100 years ago today? Maybe we should hedge a bit that we may be killing people for their organs who aren't quite dead yet, and some more research needs to go into when you're officially "braindead".

    18. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Ocker3 · · Score: 1

      Yep, I really need to get a DNR/No Heroic Measures living will or something. I don't want to live as half of myself.

    19. Re:I have an organ donor card... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      If I'm braindead, or even slightly above braindead so that I can breathe myself, just kill me, mm'kay?

      Of course. If signing myself up as a donator takes lessens my informed consent in the case of massive trauma to my brain, so be it. Please use what you can to help somebody else, because if all I've got left is a few stray brainwaves, I'm really not going to notice if you take my heart and lungs and I really don't want my wife and daughter to spend any time worrying over a human rutabaga.

      Now, some may find this a little bit controversial, but having recently driven through a few states in the Deep South, I'm pretty sure we can set up a truck in the parking lot of any Wal-Mart and come away with thousands of serviceable parts without worrying about there being any measurable brain activity.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    20. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Rhywden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Locked In Syndrome" is not comparable to braindeath. Also, if you're braindead under the current diagnosis methodology, it's pretty much guaranteed you'll never wake up. Never ever.
      You're trying to convince us here that two different states of coma are comparable to braindeath. This is not so. Not to mention, by the way, that you have better odds of winning the lottery than waking up from a coma after you've been in said coma for more than a year.

    21. Re:I have an organ donor card... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      No fucking kidding. At very best if I'm in such a state, my body will keep on going for a while (maybe years), but everything that makes me me; my personality and memories, is likely gone or sufficiently devastated as to be irrecoverable. The very least I can do at that point is give my organs so someone else can live.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    22. Re:I have an organ donor card... by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even if the brain could be physically repaired, I doubt there will ever be medical technology capable of restoring a person. We're talking massive head trauma, which more than likely means the cognitive, emotional and memory centers of the brain are destroyed or nearly so. Imagining that at some point you could be stuck in a vat and have your brain regrown would likely mean that you would largely be a whole new person. Maybe in some far off future we'll be able to back up our brains and restore them in case of serious damage, but that's not going to happen any time soon.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    23. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ItsIllak · · Score: 1

      This is when I'd like to just be able to add points to a post, but instead I'll tag along. If a doctor isn't quite sure if I'm technically dead or not, please, rip out all my organs and bury what's left - I want to check out at that point.

      I hate to think some anti-donor faction is rolling out this argument and dread to think it reducing the percentage of people donating. It's crap enough as it is in some places without applying FUD.

    24. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Genius, the whole point of the article is the fuzzy concept of what it means to be braindead and how doctors make this call. I'm pretty sure you wouldn't want to have your heart removed just because you fell unconscious.

    25. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if the person is no longer you, They still have a right to live. You should not have the right to kill someone just because you once used that body.

    26. Re:I have an organ donor card... by EdIII · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Would you trust a doctor from 100 years ago today?

      More than a doctor today, much more so.

      From the summary, it says each person is worth 2 million dollars in a 20 billion per year industry. I would say that can cause some bias. Maybe, even a little unethical behavior. I remember reading recently about an operation in China where people were being harvested.

      If we say an average doctor's salary is 200k per year that means each person they certify creates 10 years worth of salary to be distributed around the hospital staff and surrounding industries. Even if the doctor himself is not being pressured to certify brain death, others in the hospital certainly are under pressure.

      So... yeah... I would trust a doctor from 100 years ago a little bit more since I think they would be less pressured by finances and their disgusting influence on ethics in medicine.

    27. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mcneely.mike · · Score: 4, Informative

      And headless chickens still run around.

      Oh yes they do for sure!
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_the_Headless_Chicken

      --
      soylentnews.org Go there to enjoy the people!
    28. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Empiric · · Score: 2

      religious groups who have a problem with donation (but often have less of a problem with receiving donated organs)

      Care to name one?

      Yeah, I know, the quickest way to win these debates with yourself is to entirely make up your supposed opponents' supposed position, but at least one anecdotal example of evidence would be nice.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    29. Re:I have an organ donor card... by arth1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      IAAD and sometimes diagnose brain death - a lot of this academic debate ends up just scaring people or firing up various religious groups who have a problem with donation (but often have less of a problem with receiving donated organs).

      I do not believe in a god, but I don't believe in organ donation either. I don't generally see a high quality of life for the recipients. In most cases it's just prolonging the agony. If the patients had more legs and the doctor had DVM after his name, this would have been called "inhumane".

      It's time we drop the religious moral bullshit and treat our patients with as much respect as we treat our pets. Which includes letting them go when this is best.

      No, you can't have my liver, unless you intend to eat it.
      And, cthulhu damn it, let me die with some dignity!

    30. Re:I have an organ donor card... by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We're talking about some imaginary technology that allows regrowth of brains from splattered bone, rock and whatever intruded masses with blood supply cut off to large portions for lengthy enough periods to kill a good deal of the tissue off. If we ever develop that degree of technology, I suspect growing new hearts, livers, kidneys, lungs, corneas and the like will have happened a long time before, and no longer will we have much need of organ donors.

      Of course then we'll have people like you demanding "Let the headless motorbike rider who left most of his brain on the pavement of I5 live so his body can be reused, you have no right to let a perfectly good body die!!!"

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    31. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although, honestly, chickens are the stupidest birds in the world, so it's not surprising that there's not much of a difference between one with a full brain and one with just a brain stem.

    32. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      If I'm that much of a vegetable, I wouldn't want to hang around hoping..

      I know plenty of people I trust to make that judgement call for me, what I don't know is if any of them will be around when the call is to be made. From what I know of the world at large, and ER docs in particular, I'd rather not hang a "valuable meat" tag on my toe while some stranger is making a judgement call as to just how messed up my brain is.

    33. Re:I have an organ donor card... by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful

      this is an area where people who deal with the messy situations that life provides should get to drive the policy

      It says each body is worth $2million. You don't think the people who deal with 'messy situations' can be corrupted by $2million? You might personally be a beautiful and friendly doctor who never does anything wrong, but the average human is going to be thinking about that $2million (even if it just goes to the hospital, and they don't get it personally).

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    34. Re:I have an organ donor card... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      I'm cool with all my parts going into other people once brain death occurs, but I guess I'd just like them to check a little more rigorously to be sure it has occurred.

      How much more rigorous can you get than "fails to respond"? One can have an EEG, and still be nothing but a vegetable that will never breathe or do anything else on it's own again - the very definition of brain death.

    35. Re:I have an organ donor card... by rthille · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I sure hope you don't end up waiting for an organ that won't come because of an attitude like yours.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    36. Re:I have an organ donor card... by schlachter · · Score: 1

      the scary part is that there will be corruption...where people will be declared brain dead for profit.

      --
      My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
    37. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Sarten-X · · Score: 4, Informative

      Christian Science, Jehovah's Witnesses, and the Shinto faith.I'm most familiar with the Christian Science viewpoint:

      The basic idea is that God made a body with its particular destiny, and it's not man's job to screw with that plan. Some followers believe this means God gave them knowledge, intelligence, and the ability to cure disease, and no matter what happens, it's because God allows it. Other followers believe this means God made a plan for every part of the body, and if someone acts against that natural plan, they're violating the plan.

      I agree with GP: This is an issue between patients and their doctors. Personally, part of my overly-elaborate assisted-suicide (though I don't yet know who or what will assist or in what manner or at what time) plan is that if I'm ever in a situation where 4 out of 5 doctors randomly chosen say I'm beyond reasonable hope for recovery, start cutting out recoverable parts. I have no interest in using them again.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    38. Re:I have an organ donor card... by iter8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I do not believe in a god, but I don't believe in organ donation either. I don't generally see a high quality of life for the recipients. In most cases it's just prolonging the agony. If the patients had more legs and the doctor had DVM after his name, this would have been called "inhumane".

      Wrong. Recipients of kidney transplants have a high quality of life. As an anecdotal example, my son received a renal transplant 20 years ago and is sill going strong. For something non-anecdotal, see this also.

    39. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Gavagai80 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There may always be the occasional error in anything. Is it acceptable to let ten thousand people die from lack of organ transplants in order to avoid each one case where someone not quite brain dead is accidentally killed? How about a million? Where do we draw that line?

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    40. Re:I have an organ donor card... by sjames · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm fairly sure those treatments will not include an artificial brainstem within a timespan relevant to me.

      If your brainstem is shot, the rest won't matter much.

    41. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Yeah there's a great deal of difference between "being able to breathe on your own" without mechanical ventilation, and being able to answer someone, think a coherent thought, or get out of bed. A lot of people would say "disconnect" anyway if their future consisted of being alive but severely handicapped and retarded for the rest of their "natural" life.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    42. Re:I have an organ donor card... by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 2

      http://www.transweb.org/faq/q30.shtml

      28,000 people a year get organ donations. 20,000 less than the number of deaths every year in the US from traffic accidents. We still let people drive even with 50K deaths a year. I am NOT advocating shutting down organ donations; I'm advocating spending more money on research whether we're harvesting organs from individuals who are still viable living beings. What's the problem with that? What makes someone who needs an organ donation more important than someone who could possibly still be alive?

      Disclaimer: I'm currently an organ donor in Illinois, and our laws currently override the wishes of next of kin and family with regards to organ donations.

    43. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Yup, kidneys and corneas are the two transplants that work really, really well. The rest... not so much. There's a lot of variability - some people get lucky, others have serious quality of life issues. And there has never been a heart transplant recipient who has lived more than 10 years.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    44. Re:I have an organ donor card... by arth1 · · Score: 1

      From a non-related traffic accident donor? Really?

      And re the link, I'm not doubting that there's a demand, but I believe that demand is mainly because of a cultural bias for thinking human life is "sacred" and must be prolonged at all costs.

      What's the quality of life for heart and liver transplantees?

    45. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Okay, here's direct contradiction of your claim with regard to Christian Science.

      As for your other two, I'll let them speak for themselves, as I'm from a Lutheran background, and as as such (along with virtually every other Christian denomination), the GP's broad claim is demonstrably utter nonsense. Summary evidence of that, in the from of a cross-religion overview, also provided by the above link.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    46. Re:I have an organ donor card... by subreality · · Score: 1

      The trouble is that there is a whole lot of ambiguous territory. Sure, everyone's cool with being harvested once they're brain dead, but what if you're probably brain dead? What if your brain seems to be vaguely functioning but you've been in a coma for ten years and your body is slowly deteriorating? What if there's a one in a thousand chance you could recover?

      The unfortunate thing is those ambiguous cases are the majority, not the minority.

      For what it's worth, I'm perfectly comfortable with being used for spare parts if there's a one in a thousand chance that I'll recover but a one in two chance that something recovered from my body could give someone else life. Many people aren't, and they want to donate everything only after there's "absolutely no chance" they'll come back, which is as good as saying "I'm not a donor".

    47. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Kleen13 · · Score: 1

      You know, that's a harder question than it appears. A close family member of mine just passed away after a long battle, and it was the DNR that defined the end.. She decided that she was done suffering and waiting for that new and improved clinical trial, the next Big Thing... Who knows.... I'm willing to speculate that we'll see some serious advancements in medical treatments of cancer, viral infections, and spinal injury/nerve treatments in my lifetime, but for people out there suffering major ailments, every day must seem a lifetime.

      --
      That sinking feeling deep in your gut when you KNOW you screwed up bad summed up with: {head desk} {head desk}
    48. Re:I have an organ donor card... by phantomlord · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is my dad, 14 years after coil embolization to repair a brain aneurysm, a stroke resulting from a clot breaking free after the surgery and further complicated by hydrocephalus and an infection in his brain stem when he was 41 years old. As you can see, a substantial portion of his brain is dead. He has left side hemiparesis and initially had massive problems with short term memory loss, swallowing, cognitive function, lack of inhibition, etc during the first year. Today, he's almost normal, though he sometimes gets a little forgetful and he needs help walking (he never regained much of his left hand). Most of the damage was done because it took 2.5 months to get him stabilized enough to go to rehab. After the surgery for the infection in his brain stem, he was in a coma and on a ventilator. I was told that he had 3 days to come out of it or he probably wasn't going to... and, respecting his wish to never be left to live on machines, I had made the decision of when I was going to pull the plug (I was going to wait a week so he didn't accidentally hang on and die on my sister's birthday).

      The younger the brain, the more plasticity it has and the more capable of recovering from severe brain damage it is. You might not be the exact same as you are now, but my dad certainly has a decent quality of life today. "He" is definitely still very much there, though sometimes he gets frustrated because he can't do everything he used to do, particularly in way he used to do it. He hates that he's dependent on others... but he finds plenty of enjoyment in life, looks forward to the time he gets to spend with his grandkids, etc. After years of resistance and despite being a grade school dropout, he's finally decided he wants to start learning about computers and stuff.

      Massive brain damage isn't the end of the world, though it can certainly be difficult. I understand that it's quite scary to think about and a lot of people would rather be dead than face those challenges. That said, the younger you are, depending on just how severe the brain damage is, you can still have a positive life afterward and you still can even be you. Not every case is an absolute case of permanent vegetative state or "losing the soul."

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    49. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Kleen13 · · Score: 2

      Now that shit is DEEP. Not sure I agree, I think that as you are the sole caretaker of your body (in this reality or any other diminished capacity), the decisions you make NOW are still your own in regards to its (your body's) disposition. I'd like to think that what means something to me NOW as a conscious being trumps what someone else might think my recessed mind may perceive if I'm in a vegetative state. I'd rather pass my carbon off to the next being, if anyone is interested in my opinion.

      --
      That sinking feeling deep in your gut when you KNOW you screwed up bad summed up with: {head desk} {head desk}
    50. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Sarten-X · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Church of Christ Scientist does not have a specific position regarding organ donation.

      Or, in other words, some followers believe different things from other followers, as noted previously. There are groups (whom I've dealt with personally) that oppose organ transplant. No, the entire religion doesn't oppose it, but groups within it do.

      Though I can only speak for personal experience from a past career, I've dealt with religious opposition to medicine from people who call themselves:

      • Jewish
      • Roman Catholic
      • Methodist
      • Atheist (yes, really)
      • Christian Scientist
      • Hindu
      • Quaker

      That list is from medical records where people opted out of organ donation, and cited religion as the reason. Elsewhere, they specified a religion. Now, I only worked with the data, and not the patients themselves, so I can't elaborate more (though if anyone has insight on the atheist, I'd love to hear it).

      In short: No religion outright opposes organ donation. Many religious groups do.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    51. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Surt · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yeah, but you're making decisions now for half of yourself. How can you even guess what he might want? After all, even half of yourself might have a higher IQ than many retarded people. Shall we just start harvesting their organs?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    52. Re:I have an organ donor card... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      It is good to have this debate, but like abortion, this is an area where people who deal with the messy situations that life provides should get to drive the policy, rather than any particularly flavour of god-botherers.

      So, basically, ignore all discussion of morality by labelling it all as "god-bothering" (you are aware that there are plenty of moral systems not derived from religion, yes?), and just go straight to "ends justified the means". What could possibly go wrong?

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    53. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IAAD.

      I Am A Dead?

      I am a Douche (aka Doctor)...

    54. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Surt · · Score: 1

      I know the earth won't be consumed by fire tomorrow because there's no physical mechanism by which that could happen. On the other hand, medical advancements are happening all the time. In fact, it's fairly possible to predict areas in which advancements are even likely if you study the journals.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    55. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Empiric · · Score: 2

      Fair enough. Personally, I don't consider a position in direct opposition to a person's religion's official stance to a be representative of any "religious group", much as I would say that a person self-identifying as following Islam who says Allah doesn't exist, is not, in fact, following a position of a "religious group" (other than, perhaps, a group consisting of him/herself), but rather, is an individual with a wrong opinion about what their religion is--but in any case, the official stances are now linked for review as one wills.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    56. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Surt · · Score: 1

      What's your timeframe? I'd be shocked if artificial brainstem were not available in the next 20 years.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    57. Re:I have an organ donor card... by arose · · Score: 1

      Not that locked in syndrome does anything to convince me that I should cling to the desperate hope and let myself be kept around with copious amounts of machinery. Quite the opposite really.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    58. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Gaygirlie · · Score: 1

      The trouble is that there is a whole lot of ambiguous territory. Sure, everyone's cool with being harvested once they're brain dead, but what if you're probably brain dead? What if your brain seems to be vaguely functioning but you've been in a coma for ten years and your body is slowly deteriorating? What if there's a one in a thousand chance you could recover?

      I atleast would still want to be harvested. If I had been in coma for such a long time I'd most likely be retarded and horribly dysfunctional if I ever woke up, and in such a case I rather be dead. I've already made clear to all those near me that I do not wish to live my life as a vegetable or tied to a bed; if I ever got paralyzed from neck down I still would rather die. And heck, if I were to die I wouldn't be needing my organs any longer, I don't care what happens to my body after that.

    59. Re:I have an organ donor card... by petermgreen · · Score: 1
      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    60. Re:I have an organ donor card... by murphtall · · Score: 1

      OMG thank you for this link, thank you

    61. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

      (I'd elaborate but it would be a waste of time. Posting AC because this'll probably be moderated troll, not informative.)

    62. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Thiez · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Brain tissue, once dead or severely damaged, can't realistically be restored the way it was, in much the same way that you can't restore a paper than has been burned. "You" is the structure of your brain. Even if damaged parts could be replaced with healthy new neurons, the old structure would be gone, which may change you in any number of ways (lost memories, lost skills, changed personality).

    63. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I'll give an incorrect on JW's. It's pretty much a matter for each JW to decide for themselves but the majority that I know would probably go for it. The blood thing isn't really as much an issue as you'd think, you don't need the organ completely drained just best effort (else none of us would be able eat meat).

    64. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It says each body is worth $2million. You don't think the people who deal with 'messy situations' can be corrupted by $2million? You might personally be a beautiful and friendly doctor who never does anything wrong, but the average human is going to be thinking about that $2million (even if it just goes to the hospital, and they don't get it personally).

      Suppose you're alive enough to be viable someday. Rehabilitating you isn't going to be cheap (for your insurance company). In many cases, by harvesting you for $2M in parts, the hospital is probably losing money when you consider how much they could make by rehabbing you through years of physiotherapy.

    65. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Thiez · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > Even if the person is no longer you, They still have a right to live.

      Except that person doesn't exist until the brain is repaired. Before you perform the magic brain-restoration procedure there is no person 'inhabiting' the body, so the right to live does not apply. The act of repairing the brain to a useful state would be the act of creating the new person, and why would you create one new person (who, depending on the severity of the former brain damage, may have no skills and/or memories) when you can harvest some organs and preserve the lives of several already existing people? Why create a new person and effectively donate all the organs to him/her?

    66. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hentes · · Score: 1

      I didn't say they are comparable to braindeath, I said that the patients seem braindead and are sometimes wrongly diagnosed as one.

    67. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And there has never been a heart transplant recipient who has lived more than 10 years.

      Um, bullshit. I personally know someone that had a heart transplant just over 13 years ago.

    68. Re:I have an organ donor card... by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm very glad your father survived and has regained much of his abilities. Was your father ever actually declared brain dead though? There's brain injury and then there's brain injury. Keep people alive just in case somehow a massively and catastrophically damaged brain might somehow make it back out the other side seems more like basing decisions based on someone else's anecdotal claims (like yours, for instance).

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    69. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      How do you know what treatments will become available tomorrow?

      You cannot put back a soul into place once the brain matrix has rotten.

      You may be surprised just how little of your brain has to be traumatized to "erase" all appearances of "you" from your actions and reactions to the world. You may also be surprised how quickly, or slowly, that apparently damaged portion of the brain can recover.

      And, on the flip side, you can lose > 50% of your brain and still function reasonably well.

    70. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Thiez · · Score: 2

      > If we say an average doctor's salary is 200k per year that means each person they certify creates 10 years worth of salary to be distributed around the hospital staff and surrounding industries. Even if the doctor himself is not being pressured to certify brain death, others in the hospital certainly are under pressure.

      In my country (the Netherlands) people don't get paid for donating blood, so the incentive to donate too often and lie about disease and other risk factors is significantly reduced. Perhaps making organ donation non-profit for all parties involved would help remove money from the equation for doctors?

    71. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Thiez · · Score: 1

      Perhaps your organs will save the life of a child who will invent a brain repair technology 30 years from now ;)

    72. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      The earth has fire every day. It is even circling a huge ball of fire. What mechanism is there for the creation of brain restoration treatment that is not even being researched today?

    73. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a correlare to PhantomLord, there is also this guy:

      http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn12301-man-with-tiny-brain-shocks-doctors.html

      And there's TONS of cases of people that underwent having half their brain removed, and could still be functional in society and still 'themselves' all the same.

    74. Re:I have an organ donor card... by phantomlord · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He wasn't declared brain dead... though the only stimulus he responded to during the first couple days of being in a coma was literally twisting his nipples until they bled. Had THAT not showed a response, he probably would have been. Maybe a less rigorous doctor doesn't even take it that far (and he was lucky enough to have a world famous neurosurgeon). On day #3, the day they told me was pretty much the point of no return, I came in and asked him to show me two fingers... he finally gave me a gesture, though it was just with one hand. I've gotta say, I don't think I was ever so happy to be flipped off in my life. I ran to the nurse's station to inform them and I kinda got a nonchalant "yeah, we know." Nice of them to inform me.

      At the end of the day, doctors can and do make mistakes... and the patient's family is going to weigh the doctor's opinion heavily. Some won't allow it to overcome their internal biases, some have no biases and will just blindly do what the doctor says whether it is really in their loved one's best interests or not. In the end, we circle back to the question posed here... just how do we know when you are really dead for certain?

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    75. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $2 mill is a lot but if I offered you $2 mill to walk out into a waiting room and tell a family that their loved on is dead, would you? Would you be willing to tell them that they have no say in the matter and that the person is being turned to off? And now consider how much kick back that Doctor or hospital will actually see?

      Yes, Doctors are people and are corruptible but I think a lot of people would have a hard time justifying that to themselves for $2 million up front, let alone a fraction of that if anything at all. However, with an actual cause in mind? Definitely could see that. Hell, I'd bet most Doctors would be ok with doing that for no money at all.

      I'm not saying it doesn't have a great influence but let's not pretend that influence is in a vacuum. My guess is that in 99% of cases, we're probably talking about something as simple as a minor bias that they aren't even aware of.

    76. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bull. Shit.

      30 seconds of Googling reveal that the mean survival time for a heart transplant recipient is 15 years. Do your homework before spouting off like a medical genius.

    77. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's my view too. My greatest attribute is my intelligence and it forms, if not the entirety, the greater part of my persona. I solve puzzles for work. I play strategy games in my spare time to keep my brain going. As it was said in Sherlock Holmes, "I am a brain. The rest is mere appendage."

      If I'm to the point where wiping my own ass is an accomplishment, come on man, I'm not in there anymore. Grieve, let the meatsack go, and celebrate the physical end of Beardo.

      As for the parts, once I'm in that state or worse, I am done with them. I've said this before, but I'll say it again. Give my lungs to a old man so his grandkids can take their breath away. Give my heart to a teenager so it can get broken by her first crush. Take my kidneys out to a pub and have a beer on me. Watch one more sunrise with my corneas. Donate what's not useable to science. Burn what's left, use it to fertilize an apple tree, and bake me an apple pie.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    78. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mcneely.mike · · Score: 0

      You're welcome! ;-)

      --
      soylentnews.org Go there to enjoy the people!
    79. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mysidia · · Score: 1

      There may always be the occasional error in anything. Is it acceptable to let ten thousand people die from lack of organ transplants in order to avoid each one case where someone not quite brain dead is accidentally killed? How about a million? Where do we draw that line?

      Makes sense. The person mistakenly believed to be braindead might die even if their organs won't be donated -- e.g. because treatment could no longer be justified.

      What's important is that the method of determining brain death is reliable enough, and those making the determination are applying criteria objectively, not biased, and no motivation is provided to falsify their determination.

    80. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ATMAvatar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the point made by the article is that we need more rigor in determining that the person is dead before the organs are removed. Obviously, they'll be dead afterwards.

      There is no check for brain activity. They poke you a few times and remove your breather to see if you can breathe on your own. Note that a coma patient would fail some of those as well, and people *do* awake from comas. There is a big rush to declare you dead so that the organs can be harvested.

      A "brain dead" patient is a money pinata, waiting to be whacked.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    81. Re:I have an organ donor card... by flimflammer · · Score: 1

      He didn't make a broad claim. He just said "various religious groups," which is true.

    82. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Surt · · Score: 2

      Indeed, the earth has fire every day. You're wrong about the huge ball of fire though. And in neither case is there a mechanism by which either could result in the earth being consumed by fire tomorrow, or within our lifetimes.

      Whereas by contrast, there is indeed brain restoration research being conducted, and the breakthroughs that will fix this or that brain issue will arrive mostly in our lifetimes.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    83. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mysidia · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From the summary, it says each person is worth 2 million dollars in a 20 billion per year industry.

      If a person is worth so much, then why is "gifting organs upon death" required to be a donation?

      It seems the dead person's estate should require a cut of this 2 million that their organs are being sold for; to help their kin with the loss, any debts, etc.

      I see a fundamental problem with gaining massive profit from someone else's donation.

    84. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a way to save a lot of useful people.

    85. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Idarubicin · · Score: 5, Informative

      And there has never been a heart transplant recipient who has lived more than 10 years.

      Bollocks. The current record is 31 years, set when 1978 transplant recipient Tony Huesman died in 2009. Dwight Kroening finished his first Ironman triathlon 22 years after his transplant. Five-year survival runs around 70%, and ten-year survival for heart transplants is about 50%.

      A heart transplant certainly isn't a panacea; it's not a magical cure, and it carries serious and ongoing risks--but it's also not the unmitigated disaster that you seem to think it is.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    86. Re:I have an organ donor card... by sjames · · Score: 1

      I think you're underestimating the significant problem of hooking it up to the rest of the nervous system.

      Of course, you won't likely survive 20 years on a ventilator even if you don't get unplugged for non-payment.

    87. Re:I have an organ donor card... by guruevi · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you've ever been part of such cult like Christian Scientists or Jehovah's Witnesses, but the GP is very right. This very sentence on your source:

      They are free, however, to choose whatever form of medical treatment they desire - including a transplant. The question of organ and tissue donation is an individual decision.

      is a standard response given by the media response groups of those cults. Same with Jehovah's Witnesses (trust me, I was born into the cult and only recently broke free), they have the EXACT same response regards blood transfusions YET it is the first sentence that they truly do believe (Christian Scientists, JW have a similar policy regarding any medical procedure involving whole blood or their own non-consistent view on what blood is composed off): Christian Scientists normally rely on spiritual instead of medical means of healing.

      Which means they basically don't ever seek medical help so the point is moot in the first place.

      (Depending on the local variant of Christian Scientists the following may vary but there are various offshoots that do practice the following, this is a universal policy among Jehovah's Witnesses worldwide though) If they however do seek the specific medical help from outside sources they do get kicked out (disfellowshipped or excommunicated) which in those groups is an immense psychological pressure as you're not allowed or at least are strongly discouraged to have any close contact with people on the outside of the cult including but not limited to co-workers, family, siblings, your own parents and your own children (I do have sources to back that up too for JW cult apologists).

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    88. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it does make me want to sure it doesn't end with me being vivsected because some doctor is too cheap to spring for anesthetic.

    89. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh Really? http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2009639322_apusobittransplantpatient.html Mr. Huesman might disagree with your unfounded assertion. Well, he can't because he's dead, but after 31 years with a single donated heart.

    90. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So let me get this straight. You don't see a "high quality of life for the recipients", but when you're called out on transplants that actually work well, you dismiss them and then bring up specific examples that don't usually cure people to complete working order?

      Really? That's some real bullshit, man.

      For the record, a close friend of mine had a liver transplant. He would have died had he not gotten the liver, and has since gone on to do great things both for himself and his family. You might not feel it was worth it, but I doubt himself or his family agrees with your opinion.

    91. Re:I have an organ donor card... by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Three words...Jon Erik Hexum. they didn't even let the swelling go down before they were stripping his ass like a used Buick. Tell ya what, they can strip YOUR ass, put mine on a nice morphine drip and put on the local metal station okay? Thanks.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    92. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, I only worked with the data, and not the patients themselves, so I can't elaborate more (though if anyone has insight on the atheist, I'd love to hear it).

      The problem is that "athiest" is not a set of beliefs, it's the absence of a particular set of beliefs. It's possible to find weird atheists who believe in souls, just not in any gods.

      A couple of possibilities:
      Fuck everyone else (misanthrope)
      Leave a good looking corpse (fear of deformity from having organs removed)
      Squick (bits of me in other people, ew)
      Malpractice (Fear of being declared dead for organ donation before actually being 100% dead — any chance of continuing to live, no matter how small)
      Belief in a soul analog (Body is filled with some sort of "life energy" so you need to ritually bury/cremate ALL of it)

      You can probably come up with more, basically anything; like I said, "atheism" isn't a sect with a holy book, people self identify but their exact beliefs can vary wildly.

    93. Re:I have an organ donor card... by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Have you seen the pics of that black kid that got shot in the head with a magnum? Wish i could find the pic because half of his head is gone, he takes care of himself just fine last i heard. i'm sure he won't be winning any quiz shows, what with half his head being gone and all, but i bet if you walked up to him and said "oi, mind if we take your liver?' i'm sure he would be none too thrilled at the idea.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    94. Re:I have an organ donor card... by rwa2 · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, domesticated turkeys are the dumbest birds in the world! They'll drown if they look up at the rain!

      OK, that wasn't actually true, but thanks for making me look that up anyway.
      http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/turkey.asp

    95. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ozmanjusri · · Score: 5, Funny

      Although, honestly, chickens are the stupidest birds in the world,

      You have clearly never watched The Kardashians.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    96. Re:I have an organ donor card... by tixxit · · Score: 1

      It is a lot easier to just leave a box unchecked when renewing your license, saying you're against organ donation for "religious reasons," then it is to say "no" when a loved one is dying. I'd tend to believe his anecdotes.

    97. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who has been in the room for an organ harvest of a beating heart donor, I can tell you that the brain was completely gone. No anesthetic on board, yet HR and BP didn't budge when they made incision.

      The problem in the article wasn't organ donation, it was a misdiagnosis of brain death. Go ahead and sign the card... if you're really concerned about being misdiagnosed as brain dead, you should also play the lottery and wear a lightning-rod hat since the statistics are all in the same ballpark.

      Fear mongering and page views. That's the real reason for the article.

    98. Re:I have an organ donor card... by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Informative

      What crap. A friend of one of my daughter's friends is a transplant recipient. I met her at a Halloween party a couple of years ago. She's about 13 now, I think. Without a transplant, she'd have been dead as a toddler. She seems pretty normal and happy to me, having a good life.

      Another good counterexample is cornea transplantation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornea_transplant#Prognosis

    99. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of which, imagine if the Government said bikers should wear helmets but it's not compulsory. However any biker that's brain dead due to not wearing a helmet will be treated as if he/she "signed the organ donor card"...

      OK that shouldn't happen, but it might really get more people to wear helmets.

    100. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This whole conversation is a crazy, long-way-off hypothetical.

      The people in the article are brain dead. The hitch is that people that failed the short checklist (q-tip in eye, ice in ear) to qualify as brain dead often respond to stimuli when you cut into them to get their organs and still show brainwave activity. Are they really dead-dead? Most doctors say they can't feel anything, but at least the one quoted in the article says he'd always request the two specific anesthetics that don't ruin organs.

      It's not about regrowing brains, it's about the criteria for being dead.

    101. Re:I have an organ donor card... by KhabaLox · · Score: 1

      If we have the capability to restore a mind to a state that is, in essence, a completely new person, then what we have is the ability to create Life. Now, we of course have the ability to create Life the old fashioned way, but I think it's a pretty big step to take a brain-dead mind and body and create within it a new life, with a new personality, new emotions, and as far as some might be concerned, a new soul. Would we really want to do that?

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    102. Re:I have an organ donor card... by demonlapin · · Score: 5, Informative

      That would be the spinal cord, which can be alive when the brain is dead. And to prevent it from going haywire, we actually do administer anesthesia to dead people. I certainly spent enough late nights on call during residency doing organ harvests to know that.

    103. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps making organ donation non-profit for all parties involved would help remove money from the equation for doctors?

      You'll just get accused of being a communist, and be treated as if you're a blasphemer in an ultra-religious state.

      Look at how hard it is to fix the US health care system. The people fighting against fixes often say stuff like "keep Government hands off my Medicare".

    104. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If someone else has to be snuffed in order for me to receive a transplanted organ, I do not want it - no matter how badly I may need it.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    105. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I sure hope you don't find your organs being harvested because the doctor prefers to say "probably won't live" rather than "possibly will survive".

      As they anesthetize the donor, I guess you won't wake up before they pull your organs. It leaves absolutely no chance that you'll open your eyes and say "Why is my chest open? Close it!"

      My standing order regarding my life is this. If there's a chance I will live, give me the chance. If there's absolutely no chance that I will survive, let me go. If I am looking at a long, painful, terminal condition, give me the means to end it myself, and you can take what you want.

      At some point, we all die. That's a given. If you die wishing someone else would die so you can get their organs, you don't deserve to live. You're wishing the early termination of another, when they may have had a chance, so you may have a chance. Why not go take organs from homeless, and give them to those who can afford such things? Pretend I didn't say that, it'll be the new Republican health care and economy saving plan.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    106. Re:I have an organ donor card... by demonlapin · · Score: 3, Informative

      Maybe a less rigorous doctor doesn't even take it that far

      Actually, the criteria for brain death are widely published and understood. And the doctor who declares brain death is not the one who gets the organs - it's a neurologist or neurosurgeon, not the transplant guy.

    107. Re:I have an organ donor card... by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The doctor who certifies brain death is not a transplant surgeon. So he's going to risk his license and jail time (for murder!) for someone else's profit? No.

    108. Re:I have an organ donor card... by luther349 · · Score: 1

      even then it would be a copy. once the original is gone that's it.

    109. Re:I have an organ donor card... by luther349 · · Score: 1

      that's a bit different we are talking bought total or near total destruction. he still had a good half and the human brain believe it or not can rerought around alot of damage.

    110. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they believe that:
      1) After they die they go to heaven.
      2) God will save them if he wants
      3) God doesn't use doctors to save people.

      Then it sure makes a lot of sense to not care about medical treatment.

      I on the other hand believe that God prefers to get many involved to achieve his will. Turning water to wine involved people filling up jars with water, rather than the wine and containers just appearing. Feeding of the thousands involved someone providing the starting material and others in the distribution, and the actual eating. Not saying miraculous healing can't happen by itself.

    111. Re:I have an organ donor card... by luther349 · · Score: 1

      yep even if you replaced the cpu its no longer the same machine just using the old case and parts..

    112. Re:I have an organ donor card... by swillden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Would you trust a doctor from 100 years ago today?

      More than a doctor today, much more so.

      You're insane. 100 years ago, leeching was still practiced, antiseptic surgery was still a relatively new concept, useful antibiotics didn't exist, blood transfusions were just barely being made practical on a significant scale, and organ transplants (other than skin) were still 40 years away.

      If you're so far gone that modern doctors might be tempted to call you done for even though there's a very slim chance that modern medicine could bring you back, then you're so far gone that the doctors of 100 years ago would already have given their condolences to your family and headed home. And they wouldn't have given up prematurely because at that point, without modern life support equipment you're absolutely, positively gone.

      I'll take modern medicine, thanks. It's imperfect, and the financial incentives for the physicians don't align all that well with the interest of the patients, but in large part it works, and you can't say the same for what passed for medicine in 1912 -- though it was orders of magnitude better than what we had in 1812.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    113. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          And "useful" translates to "people who have great insurance, and money to pay for transplants"?

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    114. Re:I have an organ donor card... by misexistentialist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The transplant industry always says stuff like that, but if you consider the survival rates and quality of life post-transplant, maybe you wouldn't be missing out on that much after all.

    115. Re:I have an organ donor card... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      It is good to have this debate, but like abortion, this is an area where people who deal with the messy situations that life provides should get to drive the policy, rather than any particularly flavour of god-botherers.

      Like organ donors, perhaps? I am one, and I'm not cancelling my card over any of this, but don't subscribe to doctor's arrogance that deciding how to manage our ends is yours to do. It's ours. We appreciate your services, but don't forget that's what they are.

    116. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Live through the most painful medical condition known to man and come back to me and say you'd rather be kept alive than donate. I lived through hell and know one thing. If you live through three days of true hell you will still wish you'd off'd yourself three years later. People don't get that there are things in life that aren't worth living through. I can't say I wish death on myself so long as I never experience such pain again- however I'd rather die than suffer that three days of hell again.

      If you are at the point where you can't function. I say end it and give some one who can actually utilise life again a chance.

    117. Re:I have an organ donor card... by phantomlord · · Score: 2

      I never said the neurosurgeon was the one that wanted the organs, just that doctors can and do make mistakes.

      That MRI and CT series is from a night back about a month ago. About 2pm, my dad started complaining of a general headache. I gave him a tylenol #3 and an hour later, he asked for another because it still hadn't gone away. By 7pm, we were at the hospital ER, where he was complaining about acute localized pain in addition to the general headache and I informed them of his previous medical history of aneurysms, strokes, etc, which even occured at that hospital. Three hours later, I tried to talk to the triage nurse to see if they would be seeing my dad anytime soon and, despite sitting at a desk just doing paperwork, she got up and walked away from me. A half hour later, I left and drove 40 miles to another hospital, where within a half hour, they gave him a CT and decided to ship him back to the first hospital. Meanwhile, he was given valium and dilaudid for the agitation and pain.

      Back at the first hospital, the CT was ruled inconslusive because of the embolization coils, so they decided to do a CT with contrast, giving him a double dose of pretty heavy duty radiation. An hour and change later (maybe 4am), a resident from neurosurgery came down to tell us that they didn't think there was any bleeding, but it was inconclusive... he recommended an MRI but said we could do it on an outpatient basis rather than waiting. Now, your typical family may have just up and left being overtired and frustrated, but I knew better so we stayed. The MRI took an additional 6 hours before he got it. Meabwhile, they were giving him regular shots of dilaudid and it was doing nothing for the pain. Knowing that the first CT was inconclusive, they shouldn't have ordered a second CT, but an MRI/MRA instead and yet the proper diagnostic test was delayed for another quarter of a day, all while he could have been bleeding inside the brain. It's not like he's going to show symptoms with left hemiparesis.

      Ultimately, he was cleared and sent home with directions to follow up with his primary and no medication despite the fact that he was still in severe pain. His primary looked in his ear and noticed the typical milky fluid indicator of an ear infection and dianosed him with mastoiditis and prescribed antiobiotics (it took 3 courses, but has finally cleared up).

      So that's 4 big mistakes over one issue, all by different doctors... 1) they didn't order any type of diagnostics for a possible aneurysm/stroke patient, leaving him to languish in the waiting room for 3.5 hours and ultimately forcing us to go to another hospital to seek care 2) They did a duplicative test involving lots of extra radiation rather than ordering the right test to begin with 3) a resident was about to send him home despite him still having agonizing head pain and not giving him the proper diagnostic test and 4) nobody bothered to check his ears despite the pain being localized above the left ear. oh and 5) nobody bothered to order saline for him despite the other hospital putting an IV in him and him constantly complaining of thirst until he had already been at the hospital for hours. They denied all oral food and water in case he had to go to surgery even though they obviously weren't doing any rushing to see if he had to be rushed to surgery so he went 22 hours without eating. oh 6) he's on a number of medicines, which I gave them a list of, including keppra and a bunch of stuff for diabetes and they allowed him to go 24 hours without any of that.

      So, yeah, doctors make mistakes... especially in the confusion of an ER, where it's most likely a patient is going to be declared brain dead and have their organis harvested.

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    118. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JWSmythe · · Score: 2

      This is the picture you want.

          And a few cases are...

          1848, Phienas Gage, iron bar through his skull.

          1987, Ahad Israfil (the photo in the first link)

          2009, Hou Guozhu, Surgery removed half his brain.
          http://minutest.com/6678/half-brain-boy/

          2010, Angelina Mills, "LITTLE Angelina Mills had the RIGHT half of her brain ravaged by a rare condition... but thanks to miracle surgery she's LEFT with a great chance of a normal life. "

          I can't find a name on this guy, but the removal of half a brain was from a car accident. He wasn't convicted for the arrests his mug shot was taken.
      http://deadspin.com/5694479/half+headed-man-takes-worlds-most-bizarre-mugshot

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    119. Re:I have an organ donor card... by GmExtremacy · · Score: 2

      Yeah. You should never make decisions because your future self might disagree with your past self!

    120. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Compaqt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, donors don't get paid in the US, either (and the article didn't say that). The article said that a body generates about $2 million in income for various parties (hospital, surgeons, etc.).

      Think of it like this: If you're the owner of a toy store, and you got free toys because the next-door shop shut down (died), you'll still be asking full price when you sell them, and your customers will pay it.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    121. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just curious do you "help" him vote or he decides how/whether to vote himself?

    122. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Thiez · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, try reading the rest of the thread. I was talking about severe brain trauma in the context of the scenario of OP, who spoke about being brain-dead. The brain changes constantly, and my brain tomorrow won't be the same as my brain today, that hardly means I think I deserve to die tomorrow. I am not suggesting we kill everyone who loses the ability to juggle as the result of a major concussion. I just think that if we start replacing parts of the brain of a person with severe brain-trauma to a degree where the resulting person is pretty much indistinguishable from someone who has had a complete brain transplant (if such a thing were possible) we've abandoned 'curing the patient' and crossed into mad-scientist 'create new life' territory, and we're still using the body as an organ donor, but we're donating all the organs to the new person.

      Besides, saying there are 'quite a few people who disagree with me' is irrelevant. If you have an opinion on any (semi-)controversial subject there will be billions who will disagree with you. I'm not interested in a popularity contest, if you disagree try giving an argument that is not based on pulling my words out of context and misinterpreting them.

      Of course there would be situations where it's not clear how much the original person would change when using the miracle brain regeneration device, but I think the brain-death scenario is not one of those situations, so please don't go all Loki's Wager on me.

    123. Re:I have an organ donor card... by phantomlord · · Score: 1

      He decides himself. I open up the rather large absentee ballot for him on the kitchen table and explain the rows and columns to him to make sure he doesn't overvote and realizes that some races have 2 or 3 candidates he can vote for (say, school board where there may be 2 vacancies and 4 people running), especially because of the left side neglect in his field of vision. More often than not, he chooses to undervote or not vote at all and I respect his wishes. For as long as I can remember, my dad has always been the "they're all corrupt, why bother?" type voter and he only registered to vote in the first place because he had a government job where they got Election Day off if they voted.

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    124. Re:I have an organ donor card... by EdIII · · Score: 2

      The question was trust. With the context of post I did not believe it was a question about confidence in their abilities and knowledge, but about their character.

      Considering that, I take trust to mean if I think the doctor truly has my best interests at heart, and is not simply working towards that next fancy junket at Pharma's expense, or just ordering tests because he gets a cut and/or needs to maximize his/her return from my medical insurance.

      In that context, I do believe that doctors a 100 years ago had their decisions much less influenced by money.

      These days doctors are under enormous pressure, ridiculous levels of debt, burdened by skyrocketing malpractice insurance (doctors have been fleeing my state), and are very much pressured by money and resources.

      The fact is there was much less outside influence acting upon my doctor 100 years ago, versus today. That's why I would trust them more.

    125. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > Well, donors don't get paid in the US, either (and the article didn't say that).

      And I never suggested there were paid. I was using the blood donor example to illustrate how removing financial incentives can benefit objectivity and honesty. If you had read a little more thoroughly, you might have noticed the "non-profit for all parties involved" part, which would at the very least include the doctor and the hospital.

      > The article said that a body generates about $2 million in income for various parties (hospital, surgeons, etc.).

      And presumably it did so to suggest there is financial incentive to harvest organs, which would lead one to conclude that someone is making a profit (otherwise there would be no financial incentive), and that someone is either the doctor or someone who might influence the doctor.

      > Think of it like this: If you're the owner of a toy store, and you got free toys because the next-door shop shut down (died), you'll still be asking full price when you sell them, and your customers will pay it.

      In your example the owner of the toy store has a financial incentive to kill his neighbour, the badness of which is exactly the point I'm trying to make ;)

      What I'm suggesting is that the toy making next door should state in his will that he leaves you his toys, but you're not allowed to make a profit on them, which would remove your financial incentive to murder him. Of course since you want to make a profit you would just get rid of his toys, but for organs supply and demand are different and it involves saving lives.

    126. Re:I have an organ donor card... by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      only do gooder types whose lives match up perfectly with the brown nose lifestyle or the ultra rich qualify for donations anyway, so it's likely he's not missing out on much.

    127. Re:I have an organ donor card... by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      the issue is the ability to determine if braindeath has occurred is not fool proof.

    128. Re:I have an organ donor card... by willpb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't trust how the system is set up right now. Last time I went to renew my license I didn't check the organ donor box, the DMV checked it for me anyway. I keep having to go online and cancel my registration, which is rather annoying. My issue is that these registries are run by private corporations with a financial incentive to be able to harvest people's organs and there aren't enough regulations in place. I would be willing to donate if it didn't involve money and I knew my rights would be protected.

      Here are a few state donor registries where you can edit your donor information and make exclusions
      Florida
      Georgia
      South Carolina
      Utah

    129. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to work in a long-term care facility with people who didn't have the ability to talk, walk, or swallow food. They were fed through a surgical opening through the torso into their stomachs (a stoma). No thanks. There is more to life than breathing and shitting.

    130. Re:I have an organ donor card... by RancidPeanutOil · · Score: 1

      I guess you're going for some kind of contrary position here, but there are a lot of people alive because of transplants. They're not sequestered away or anything. Perfectly healthy, normal, and long-lived, as well as easy to find. Many, many people. I don't think your information is accurate, and even if the rates are as low as you hint at, I think the q-o-l issue has been mischaracterized to you.

      This is clearly biased, but it's not a false front; these are real humans: http://donatelife.net/stories-of-hope/

    131. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can scratch "Roman Catholic" off that list. Any Catholic who claims organ donation after death is against their religion is making a decision that goes against the written tennets of their faith. They're either acting out of a faulty understanding of their faith or have the same fears as we're discussing here in TFA. The teaching of the church makes it clear. Catholics aren't just allowed to donate organs after death, they're ENCOURAGED:

      (Catechism of the Catholic Church paragraph 2296)
      Organ donation after death is a noble and meritorious act and is to be encouraged as a expression of generous solidarity.

      (Paragraph 2301)
      The free gift of organs after death is legitimate and can be meritorious.

    132. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who marked this retard "insightful"? He's a religious piece of shit, that deserves to be castrated, not listened to. I guess Slashdot really isn't what it used to be...

    133. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Perhaps only when deciding whether or not to continue to live. Or should we go ahead and tell teenagers that become suicidal that that's a good plan, their future selves possibly regretting the decision not withstanding?

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    134. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      There is a greater chance of the sun going supernova tomorrow than there is a treatment to restore a physically damaged brain tomorrow. Your fantasies don't make reality.

    135. Re:I have an organ donor card... by DarkIye · · Score: 1

      What crap. A friend of one of my daughter's friends is a transplant recipient. I met her at a Halloween party a couple of years ago. She's about 13 now, I think.

      Are you trolling? Are you trolling? Damn you, internet.

    136. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Surt · · Score: 1

      Well, our sun isn't the kind that goes nova. That chance is zero. I know people in the brain repair research area. That chance is greater than zero.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    137. Re:I have an organ donor card... by GmExtremacy · · Score: 1

      You can try to help them if you want, but if you fail, I'm sure you know the consequences. It's ultimately their decision unless you wish to lock them up in a bubble.

      Their future self isn't anymore objectively important than their current self.

    138. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homeless are dirty people who often use substances that damage organs like alcohol, tobacco and drugs.

    139. Re:I have an organ donor card... by SteveW928 · · Score: 1

      The real issue here is the integrity of doctors and corruption in medical system. But, I'm with many of the other posters here in that I still think organ donation is the noble thing to do... and then police the system to try and keep the corruption to a minimum. The reversible vs irreversible issue is the key. More technology, will of course, push that line around. But, so long as, for the most part, doctors make good decisions based on the current bounds of medicine, I'd rather take my chance of helping someone else than fear being a victim of the corruption.

    140. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Siridar · · Score: 1

      Yeah. You should never make decisions because your future self might disagree with your past self!

      Smokers would agree with you, there.

    141. Re:I have an organ donor card... by VanessaE · · Score: 1

      As for the parts[...]

      Ah, where are my modpoints when I need them the most. This has to be the best comment I've read on Slashdot in years. The world needs a whole lot more who think this way.

    142. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hentes · · Score: 1

      Selling organs is banned by international treaties for good reasons.

    143. Re:I have an organ donor card... by CarbonShell · · Score: 1

      Didn't 'God' take a part of Adam to make Eve?

    144. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. Personally, I don't consider a position in direct opposition to a person's religion's official stance to a be representative of any "religious group", much as I would say that a person self-identifying as following Islam who says Allah doesn't exist, is not, in fact, following a position of a "religious group" (other than, perhaps, a group consisting of him/herself), but rather, is an individual with a wrong opinion about what their religion is

      So now all the advocates of bed-wetting at FOX news can quit trying to scare us with "Islamic terrorists", and start warning about heretical or lapsed Muslims, who think suicide is OK?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    145. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      So, basically, ignore all discussion of morality by labelling it all as "god-bothering"

      Yes, God's busy helping Tebow win his football game, and doesn't want to be bothered about people suffering head trauma.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    146. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure why you're not modded up yet.

      The whole article argues that we don't really know when someone is "dead" yet in the cases outlined; just best guesses by doctors.

      Would you trust a doctor from 100 years ago today? Maybe we should hedge a bit that we may be killing people for their organs who aren't quite dead yet, and some more research needs to go into when you're officially "braindead".

      I prefer trusting the doctors, who *might* make a bad call, *if* I ever get into this situation, in preference to the guarantee of spending decades as a vegetable on life support because someone thinks I might wake up.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    147. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      From the summary, it says each person is worth 2 million dollars in a 20 billion per year industry. I would say that can cause some bias.

      How much money does someone stand to gain if they keep you on life support for 30 years?

      I remember reading recently about an operation in China where people were being harvested.

      Supposedly people sometimes get harvested when they go in for dental surgery.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    148. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Although, honestly, chickens are the stupidest birds in the world,

      You have clearly never watched The Kardashians.

      What does Star Trek have DS9 to do with it?

    149. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      From the summary, it says each person is worth 2 million dollars in a 20 billion per year industry.

      If a person is worth so much, then why is "gifting organs upon death" required to be a donation?

      Selling organs is banned by international treaties for good reasons.

      Also, that 2 mil doesn't just go into someone's pocket. An organ transplant is a very complex procedure, with lots of people and facilities involved.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    150. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Perhaps your organs will save the life of a child who will invent a brain repair technology 30 years from now ;)

      And another who will invent the time machine...

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    151. Re:I have an organ donor card... by michelcolman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's exactly the kind of reaction I was afraid of when I saw the article. Thousands of people who are waiting for a transplant to save their life, will die because of people reading articles like this and going "maybe there's a tiny little chance that the doctors are wrong, who knows, maybe I'll still feel pain even without a brain, and maybe they'll find a miracle cure to revive dead brains during the hours that I'm brain dead, and who knows what else...".

      Someone who needs a transplant to survive, has a 100% chance of dying if he or she does not get that organ. Weigh that against your "maybe this" or "maybe that". Once the doctors declare you brain dead, even if through some magical unexplained event you do come alive again, you're likely to be more like a zombie than your old self. And if your brain is dead, even though your body "responds" to pain, "you" won't feel a thing. Your brain is dead, you are not conscious, who cares if some of your muscles still twitch in an automatic reaction to pain.

      Maybe people with a donor card should get priority to receive organs before any of the irrational and/or selfish cowards do. That would probably help a lot in the shortage of organs.

    152. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ClioCJS · · Score: 1
      Part of the point is - if someone is going to profit $2M from your body, why the hell should you be saddled with burial expenses and a huge medical bill. (I reviewed medical records for the uninsured for a whole summer once, with the conclusion that the mere act of dying typically results in a $500K bill.)

      I'll be an organ seller. Pay off my wife's mortgage (via my organs) if I die early, otherwise it can go to the worms. If they aren't willing to pay, they already have enough organs, so I'm not hurting anybody. Hell... everyone's student loans could be paid off via a lien on their future organs. Doctor examines your liver? No drinking? Your credit rating just went up.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    153. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Leeching has been re-introduced because it's been shown to have actual effect. Please update your example list next time ;)

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    154. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mariox19 · · Score: 2

      It's banned for bad reasons. The reason for the shortage in organs that everyone is always crying about is Economics 101. If people were allowed some kind of death benefit for donating their organs, even if it were something along the lines of a burial policy, you would see many more people considering it.

      --

      quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

    155. Re:I have an organ donor card... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0

      The problem here, of course, is not so much that the body is beheaded, but that there is a connectivity problem in the autonomous nervous system. It is often unclear what this problem is, exactly, and how it affects perception of the person inside the brain. It is likewise unknown what the chances of recovery are, except that they're statistically relatively small. It is not known how small exactly. We don't really know all that much about the connections between the brain and the autonomous nervous system. The only certainty is that most of it (except the eyes) goes through the brainstem, and most (not all) functions that we consider a human originate in the cortex. So what's really going on in a BHC is a lack of signals traversing the corpus callosum.

      So sadly, the worst is true : it varies from :
      1) it doesn't affect perception at all ("locked in syndrome"). Usually, but not always, the eyes will still exhibit autonomous functions.
      if you are a donor, you best pray to high heavens this doesn't happen to you
      2) the person really is dead, and no perception will occur. Sometimes the eyes are nevertheless open and partially functional.

      Of course, the real world is even more complex than this, people have been known to recover fully from both cases. Both from locked in syndrome and from braindead state. This is rare, but due to organ donations being commonplace for nearly as long as we actually have figures, it is not actually known how rare.

      In both cases, doctor's neither kill the patient directly, nor administer anaesthetics, because both may cause deterioration in the organs to be transplanted. It is thus a very real possibility that there is one case of a patient being cut apart while fully aware on a yearly basis in America.

      The real problem with signing a donor card is that it takes away the decision from everyone involved, and delivers it into the hands of people whose only incentive does not have anything to do with your condition. If you sign that thing, doctors have permission (and a strong incentive) to cut you apart the moment you are declared braindead. Given the incentives, it is feared that this even affects the decision to declare a patient braindead. But the worst, imho, is that the choice is taken away from both the person, and from their loved ones, who would normally have to give the go-ahead (presumably after being convinced doctors have done all they can, which would be a safeguard). The problem with this is that it often takes time to contact next of kin, and during that time doctors have to watch perfectly good organs deteriorate and fail.

      I would never sign that card, and if it becomes opt-out I'd opt-out immediately. My wife is perfectly aware that I would be willing to donate my organs, and she makes the decision, simply because I trust her with it. If I sign that paper, there's no telling who that decision gets transferred to. If that means my organs die, well too bad. Without consulting me or someone I trust to make that decision on my behalf, nobody has any right whatsoever to my organs.

      The sad part is that in order to harvest organs, the hippocratic oath was modified (just as it was modified to remove the restrictions forbidding euthanasia and abortus). It is very sad that we have exactly zero respect for the contract that gave us modern medicine. What people don't realize is what happened with medical knowledge in ancient Greece before the hippocratic oath, and how badly it affected society (someone basically went to the local doctor for a good poison to murder someone else in more than a few stories). But hey we see a quick buck (for doctors) or a quick organ (for patients) and bye-bye oath. I am of the opinion that one day normal people (you, me, the poor in general) will thorougly regret that. (btw yes, second link is morality-preaching obama-bashing nonsense, scroll down to the paper and read it. I have looked for a direct link, not found one)

    156. Re:I have an organ donor card... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      You're merely pointing to a propaganda site. Regardless the choice is not about donating or not donating organs, but it is about having someone else decide to donate *your* organs.

      Incidentally, I find nothing about that little detail on the site you mentioned.

    157. Re:I have an organ donor card... by billcopc · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on the whole "braindead" argument, but I think the outrage in the article is the profit motive. As a citizen of a nation with free healthcare, I'm absolutely amazed at the ludicrous cost of services in the U.S.

      $750k for one organ ? That's as much as a really pimptastic new house! Does the donor's family get a cut of this dirty money ?

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    158. Re:I have an organ donor card... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      No, try reading the rest of the thread. I was talking about severe brain trauma in the context of the scenario of OP, who spoke about being brain-dead. The brain changes constantly, and my brain tomorrow won't be the same as my brain today, that hardly means I think I deserve to die tomorrow. I am not suggesting we kill everyone who loses the ability to juggle as the result of a major concussion. I just think that if we start replacing parts of the brain of a person with severe brain-trauma to a degree where the resulting person is pretty much indistinguishable from someone who has had a complete brain transplant (if such a thing were possible) we've abandoned 'curing the patient' and crossed into mad-scientist 'create new life' territory, and we're still using the body as an organ donor, but we're donating all the organs to the new person.

      That would be a reasonable argument if and only if doctors were able to make this determination. We have very little information on what brain injuries one can recover from, and which are fatal. You say so yourself, they have no such ability.

      Meanwhile there's several known cases of people who have recovered from braindead. It is *not* a certainty that harvesting organs does not kill an otherwise viable person, just a statistically likely event.

      So the only moral argument to be made is that of the "greater good", and we all know where that argument leads.

    159. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The act of repairing the brain to a useful state would be the act of creating the new person, and why would you create one new person (who, depending on the severity of the former brain damage, may have no skills and/or memories) when you can harvest some organs and preserve the lives of several already existing people? Why create a new person and effectively donate all the organs to him/her?

      Extending your logic (interests of few/many trumps the interests of one), we should just kill off complete healthy persons and harvest them to fix several others who would otherwise die. Or perhaps we could make some kind of contest, test whole population for useful skills and intelligence and then harvest organs from those on the low end until we satisfy demand?

    160. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JosKarith · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I burned out a good chunk of my brain in the 90's in a suicide attempt. I can still function, hold down a good job, have a relationship. I'm not the same person i was before the incident but I'm still a person with feelings, hope, dreams and rights.

      --
      'Don't worry' said the trees when they saw the axe coming, 'The handle is one of us.'
    161. Re:I have an organ donor card... by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that the tests would be any different if you didn't have an organ donor card? The only thing that would happen is that, once you were declared brain dead you'd be pulled off the machines faster (technically giving you less time to have a miraculous recovery), since there's no point in keeping your body in tip-top condition any more.

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    162. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you're making a lot of assumptions about the information contained in the portion of the damaged brain. It's well known that you don't need your whole brain to function normally. Tasks normally handled by one side of the brain can be done by the other. We're not talking scenarios where the person suffered enough trauma to destroy the brain, but where it's damaged to the point of debatable.

    163. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Ihlosi · · Score: 1

      Imagining that at some point you could be stuck in a vat and have your brain regrown would likely mean that you would largely be a whole new person.

      It's not organ donation, it's whole body donation, to an entirely new person.

    164. Re:I have an organ donor card... by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      It is cool to see just how strongly people respond to even remote incentives. Your case obviously pretty much settles the argument in favour of not signing a donation card, and yet people keep arguing instead of congratulating you. It is extremely great that your father survived.

      The fact that medical professionals lied to you, or at the very least withheld information also settles whether or not doctors can be trusted with this decision. I have also had experience with medical professionals nonchalantly withholding information, then claiming afterwards it's not a big deal. I am not even saying that what they did was out of malice, or financially motivated. Even the mere fact that mistakes happen would be more than enough arguments for any rational human to refuse to sign a donor card. Which is the right decision.

      I wonder how much of the opposition to your case is motivated because some people feel entitled to your organs, and your father's.

    165. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Turning water to wine involved people filling up jars with water, rather than the wine and containers just appearing."

      Lots of wineries can do that 'miracle' to this very day.

    166. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hentes · · Score: 1

      And then we would have third-world warlords export organs en masse from "volunteer donors" .

    167. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your suggestion of euthanasia. As another poster said, if they survive the brain trauma they will probably never be the same. If anything, they would be a heavy burden (financially and emotionally) to their family and to an extent society.

      I don't want a prolonged death. I want a quality life.

    168. Re:I have an organ donor card... by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Meh, I seriously doubt a hospital makes $2 million off of you. $2 million may be the blank market value of an entire body worth of functional organs. Not all your organs will be functional, and when you are an organ donor your body parts aren't "sold off". Sure they charge plenty of money for the transplant, but they don't sell your organs.

    169. Re:I have an organ donor card... by therealkevinkretz · · Score: 1

      Wild turkeys are no prize winners. Typically a male has a harem of several females which he guards, often aggressively, from other males. I heard a thud-thud-thud outside my door one morning, and looked to find a make turkey pecking at his reflection in my car (my weeks-old first new car, no less).

    170. Re:I have an organ donor card... by therealkevinkretz · · Score: 2

      Donors (or their estates) should be allowed to receive payment. The waiting lists would become shorter very quickly. I'll donate my organs if the surgeons and hospitals agree to donate their time, equipment, and expertise.

    171. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Sarten-X · · Score: 2

      Atheism (literally meaning "no god") is the belief that there is no god.

      Agnosticism (literally meaning "no special knowledge") is the lack of belief one way or the other.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    172. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A friends mother in law went to the hospital. We went to visit she was in for over a day when nurse came in and put a name tag on her arm. I thought it weird that over a day and she finally gets a name tag. I went and checked it. It was for the wrong patients name. I always question and try to think with what they tell me at hospitals. Mistakes happen all the time.

    173. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a likely candidate for a splattering of brain on pavement, and I prefer the idea of splattered brain -> Heart/Lung Machine -> cut me up... to dented head, not shivering or twitching and getting cut up...

      I'm not listed as a donor at the moment because of exactly this issue, I don't agree will all of the protocol, and know that the protocol is likely to be followed so everyones asses are covered...

    174. Re:I have an organ donor card... by crakbone · · Score: 1

      Leeches are still used and so are maggots for wound cleaning. http://www.livescience.com/203-maggots-leeches-medicine.html

    175. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      And the doctor who declares brain death is not the one who gets the organs - it's a neurologist or neurosurgeon, not the transplant guy.

      Meh, I'm sure they play golf together. And they're all freemasons, the lot of 'em.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    176. Re:I have an organ donor card... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      If there's a chance I will live, give me the chance. If there's absolutely no chance that I will survive, let me go.

      The problem is that there are many situations where it is not as clear cut as that, or where it is simply a matter of medical opinion. The bottom line is that we simply don't know enough about the human body and don't have the time or money to spend diagnosing every condition completely when organ donation is on cards to make the correct decision 100% of the time.

      You should look at it as reducing your own chance of survival in the event of a serious accident by 1-2% in exchange for potentially helping several other people.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    177. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And a JW family I knew offered the son's organs for donation, just to show that it isn't all one-way like GGP would have it. Of course, they would have been more use if he hadn't splattered them all across a rock face, but the offer was made.

    178. Re:I have an organ donor card... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The article offers something of a solution: don't sign the card, but provide your family with instructions that your organs are to be donated after enough tests have been run to be sure your brain is kaput.

      Families are very emotional when a loved one has just died, which is why we have the card in the first place. What we need is a tick box on the card for "only after an EEG" or "only after an MRI" etc.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    179. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Leeches are back in fashion. Suck the infected crap out, apparently.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    180. Re:I have an organ donor card... by wisty · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, it can increase your chance of survival. The doctors may try harder to stabilize you if they know you're a potential donar, because they know that even if you don't survive your organs are worth something. There's a slim chance that the extra effort to stabilize you will save your life, if the doctors were wrong to write you off too early. Assuming ER doctors (or paramedics) are more likely to make a bad call than a doctor deciding to switch you off in the ICU (where they have time to think), the organ card might be a net gain for you.

      Either way, it makes *very* litte difference.

    181. Re:I have an organ donor card... by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      That was beautifully said. Thank you!

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    182. Re:I have an organ donor card... by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      This is a good point. There ought to be at least a clause where they have to harvest the brain first. I agree with the GP that there are MANY things above dead that are not worth being. It would be long drawn out torture to be that way. I guess I'd still rather have my organs harvested Unit 731 style than live that way for years.

      --
      ...
    183. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the disgusting thing about American healthcare - but you guys can sleep in the bed you've made.

    184. Re:I have an organ donor card... by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 1

      They poke you a few times

      I assume you are being deliberately glib to try and prompt a reaction.

      Checking various factors such as corneal reflex or gag reflex to establish brain involvement is hardly the same as giving someone a poke.

      Your implication that doctors don't bother checking if someone is brain dead before pronouncing them is both insulting and ridiculous.

    185. Re:I have an organ donor card... by jawtheshark · · Score: 1
      Form wikipedia: On October 18, six days after the accident, Hexum was declared brain dead. With his mother's permission [...]

      Not exactly as you describe it....

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    186. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well played

    187. Re:I have an organ donor card... by stdarg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's some faulty logic. With so much money at stake, warlords aren't killing people to harvest organs. Poor people voluntarily do it for a small cut of the profits. The black market already exists, and the laws are keeping those black market activities alive.

      http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/life/human-biology/organ-donation7.htm

      The donors were recruited mostly from the slums of Brazil, flown to South Africa where the operation was performed, compensated between $6,000 to $10,000 and returned home [source: Rohter]. The South African middlemen were then able to sell the organs for as much as $100,000 [source: Handwerk].

      There's absolutely NO POINT in banning compensation to the donor, because as soon as the organs are harvested, the people who have them can sell them. What do you think would change if organ donors received $500k in the US, except that the shortage of organs would fall?

    188. Re:I have an organ donor card... by BigDukeSix · · Score: 1
      You've been modded to +5, so at least a few other people share your belief that there are other tests that are in some way better. This reflects a typical belief on Slashdot, that the people who spent time creating a solution somehow didn't think of what took you all of five minutes. Brain death is not a subjective determination about one's quality of life after brain injury. It's meant to determine whether or not it's just the machine's that are keeping you alive, without actually killing you.

      Recall that the brain may divided into the cerebrum, or "monkey brain," where all of the higher functions that make us human live; and the medulla, or "lizard brain," where all of the lower functions that keep us alive live. By the time we're talking about brain death determination, the monkey brain is gone. This is an unresponsive patient, off all sedating meds for several days, whose EEG shows at best sporadic activity (EEG will only truly flatline once the heart stops providing blood flow). You should have had an EEG before you ever get to this point.

      The "wet willy" test is meant to excite the oculogyric reflex, where cold water gets the fluid in your semicircular canals convecting just a bit. The reflex makes your eyes move as part of the (lizard-brain mediated) attempt to remain standing in what is perceived as a loss of balance. The "shut off your air" part is to see if you retain the deepest held mammalian reflex, the drive to breathe, which is biochemically mediated by retained carbon dioxide.. Neither of these has anything to do with the cerebrum. If you can't do these things, you really are dead.

      The fact that someone somewhere fucked up and nearly killed someone isn't really news. Nor does it really bear on the subject of whether or not "brain dead is really dead." The alternative is to waste away, unresponsive, on a ventilator, until you die of overwhelming infection. You have to set the standard somewhere.

    189. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      You don't need a time machine to defrost a brain.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    190. Re:I have an organ donor card... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Is it acceptable to let ten thousand people die from lack of organ transplants in order to avoid each one case where someone not quite brain dead is accidentally killed?

      Yes, any number is acceptable since this is a matter of consent. There's no point arguing how many lives you save or that accidents don't matter because we've already established that this is an optional, lucky thing for the transplant recipient, not something to be counted on. The answer should be to make the donor form a little more thorough, and somehow ask about these accidental things. If someone says "Yes donate my organs even if there's an x% chance I will recover" then go for it.

    191. Re:I have an organ donor card... by u64 · · Score: 1

      'A "brain dead" patient is a money pinata, waiting to be whacked'

      Money? How can a organ *donation* have anything to do with money?

      If that's the case then my last will would be:
      I donate nothing from my body. However, you're free to buy anything you wish. Money
      goes to my family, or sharities.
      Though anyone who clearly can't afford, are free to pick what they want first.
      Non-profit science picks next.
      And then the selling begins.
      Any remains after that, you can feed the lions at the zoo, or whatever people can think of.
      I prefer something natural. No cremation, it seems kinda pointless. I'm not that fat, i wont
      warm up any houses.

    192. Re:I have an organ donor card... by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Guess who got his money? that would be his mother. And the tabloids at the time (not the greatest source but nobody seemed to really care about a bit actor) posted that they had been estranged for quite awhile and he hadn't spoken to her in years. BTW he was worth about 3 million bucks, not a bad payday, people have been killed for less, just saying.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    193. Re:I have an organ donor card... by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1

      Canceling your status as an organ donor on the basis of this article is rather over-reactive. It would be better to talk with your physician about concerns about this. This is a conversation (or series of conversations, as we learn and understand more) that we all ought to have, because every one of us is going to die someday, and most of us will have to deal with end-of-life decision making for loved ones, whether we are the one who tells the doctor that it's OK to remove life support or the ones who have to agree with (and make peace with) that person.

      I am pretty sure that no doctor is going to hack away at you before he/she has discussed your situation with a family member, and I have heard that even with the donor box checked on a license, organ harvesting doesn't occur without a family's permission. Once you're in the state that they're thinking you are ready to become an organ donor, your fate is pretty well out of your control anyhow unless you wake up and tell them you're not dead yet.

      FWIW, when we're unconscious, we can still act surprisingly conscious. I've been under a few times for wisdom teeth and major surgery, and I've been told of things I did or said, of which I had no recollection. And I was a long way from being a beating-heart cadaver.

      I have a somewhat peculiar habit of trying to imagine what it would be like to die in the ways I hear of people dying, and I've been sure I don't have the guts to do it; however, I realize that I don't have any choice in the matter, and I will go whenever and however I go. The best I can do is suck it up and try to hang on for the end of the ride. I'm middle-aged, and from here on out, it's only downhill.

      Finally, I have known a couple of people who have benefited from transplants. Besides their own enjoyment of life, there has been the joy of their families at not losing them so soon. If someone else can get some benefit from my heart, cornea, or any other part of me after I'm through with it, then I'm all for it.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    194. Re:I have an organ donor card... by D-Cypell · · Score: 1

      No.

      Atheism does not mean 'no god', it means 'without god'. It describes a person who does not include a deity in their worldview, and behaves as if there was no god.

      An agnostic claims that certainty is not possible due to their being no way to reach a state of certainty. Myself, and the vast majority of atheists are also agnostic, in that our position is that there is no way to be certain, but we exist as if there was no deity.

      You will however, find theists that claim to know for sure.... this is the essence of irrationality.

    195. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      only do gooder types whose lives match up perfectly with the brown nose lifestyle

      What kind of person bashes people who do good? Teenaged ones?

    196. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The basic idea is that God made a body with its particular destiny, and it's not man's job to screw with that plan.

      This is very simplistic. There is a much more deeper religious concern. Most posters seem to imply that it is most valuable to live for a maximum time span. If you asked Socrates or Jesus about this, they certainly would disagree.

      Actually, a good/right life is more important than a long life.

      I doubt that wanting someone else to die for the sake of prolongating one's own life, does contribute to a good/right life. As a side note: the term "organ donor" is quite a sarcastic euphemism.

    197. Re:I have an organ donor card... by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      No way his mom got the money. Unless the US works significantly different from other civilised western countries.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    198. Re:I have an organ donor card... by swillden · · Score: 1

      I think you're wrong there as well. 100 years ago, doctors were also financially incented to perform unnecessary procedures, etc. because they got paid for work performed. I'll grant that they didn't have as much debt and insurance pressure, but countering that is the fact that given the vastly lower efficacy of their work, it was much harder for patients to evaluate how much benefit they were receiving, and much easier for doctors to push all sorts of pure quackery, such as patent medicines, since not even the doctors knew what worked and what didn't.

      Remember that the phrase "snake oil" derives from medical practices of the 18th and 19th century, and that state of affairs continued into the early 20th century.

      It's tempting to think that the idealized model of the country doctor, making house visits, black bag in hand, was an inherently more honest and trustworthy person. But I don't think there's any evidence of that.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    199. Re:I have an organ donor card... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Leeching, as in bloodletting, draining "bad blood" from the body, has been re-introduced? I think not. The use of leeches for other purposes, yes, but that's not what the term meant 100 years ago.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    200. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Nice weaseling :) Leeching was practiced then and now. Different purposes doesn't make it not leeching. If there's leeches on you, it's leeching. C'mon. Just don't say "100 yrs ago they practiced leeching!" It makes you sound like you don't realize that it was re-introduced. That's the logical conclusion from reading it.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    201. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Eponymous+Hero · · Score: 1

      i'm an organ donor, and i would gladly be "snuffed" to give you an organ transplant that would save your life. don't take it like that.

      --
      insensitive clod overlords obligatory xkcd car analogy russian reversals whoosh pedant fanbois ftfy in 3...2...1..PROFIT
    202. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      If the burned paper isn't too badly smashed up, it is still theoretically possible to read the information from it. The same could be true of a severely damaged brain. I imagine someday it will be possible to MRI a damaged brain, run the data through software, and reconstruct an image of what the brain was just before the damage (within a reasonable margin of error). This image could then be run in a virtual environment, or printed on an artificial brain.

    203. Re:I have an organ donor card... by swillden · · Score: 1

      So I should have used the term "bloodletting", to satisfy pedants.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    204. Re:I have an organ donor card... by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      That's pretty much my point, yes.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    205. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the problem here is not that the article casts doubt on whether one's braindeath is preculding feeling pain as you're being organ harvested, but that instead we are learning that there is a lot of money from corporate interests involved in the process now, and they have a vested interest in determining we are braindead even if we aren't. In other words: the system is being corrupted by greed, and the odds that I as a norgan doner may not legitimately be dead when harvested (and could even be in better shape than the recipient of my organs) have suddenly just gone up. Evidence? Inferred. Likelihood due to human nature and greed? Damned likely. Consensus: I can't rely on what used to be the best and easiest way to give to the community anymore, because it's not actually expressing my wishes (which are that I am actually clinically dead before being harvested).

    206. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article offers something of a solution: don't sign the card, but provide your family with instructions that your organs are to be donated after enough tests have been run to be sure your brain is kaput.

      ...by which point most of the organs will be useless, or so close to useless that the time it takes to get them out of you and prepped for the next person, makes them useless...

      I understand your concern, and fully support your choice (because it's yours to make) - but I'll be sticking with that standard organ donation card, and my Driving Licence (UK) that indicates they can take everything they want (except my brain - that's going to whatever Uni wants them at the time, on the understanding it doesn't end up being reanimated in a jar).

      The quality of my life is vitally important to me - more so than the existence of said life - so if its gotten to the state where I can't wipe my own arse, then it's already past the point of no return, and they should've taken my organs before I damaged them even further.

    207. Re:I have an organ donor card... by iamhassi · · Score: 1

      "My issue is that these registries are run by private corporations with a financial incentive to be able to harvest people's organs and there aren't enough regulations in place. I would be willing to donate if it didn't involve money and I knew my rights would be protected. "

      This. It is profitable to the deciding party to declare you dead. That's why I will never be a organ donor. They take your organ and sell it for $500,000+ and give your family nothing. How is this even still going on? You think you're saving people's lives when really you're giving doctors and hospital administrators Porsches.

      Same with blood: they take your blood, give you a cookie and a sticker saying "I gave blood today", and sell that pint for $300+.

      This is also why there's not as much research as there could be in artificial blood or organs, because people keep giving their blood and organs away for free. Why invent something new when you get the originals for free?

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    208. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no Jewish response that prohibits organ donation, but there is disagreement with the law on determination of death. Some Jewish authorities do not accept brain death (they only accept heart death as death), limiting the amount of organ donation that can be done when the government determines they are dead.

      In either case, there are groups like http://www.hods.org/ who do very publicly support organ donation (and also support brain death as death, but provide options for those that don't). However, to donate and only do so in line with Jewish law, you still have to decline being registered as an organ donor in by using essentially a living will that controls what can and can't be donated and when much more specifically than what currently happens in the medical system. If anything, it should be seen as a privacy issue at that point.

    209. Re:I have an organ donor card... by pbasch · · Score: 1

      Yes. As you say, this brings up interesting issues on abortion. When do people begin and end? I suspect it has something to do with when brains begin and end. They most certainly do not begin as a blastocyst... And when the brain begins, it's not even necessarily a human person, it might be an electronic person, or even a cetacean person. Who knows? As to where this takes us in abortion policy, that's also interesting. When there's a sufficiently developed brain, does a state interest begin in that unborn person? Or should the state interest, libertarian-style, always take a back seat to the parent's liberty? [NB: by libertarian, I mean a principled libertarian, not a modern Republican "libertarian"] I kind of like the early Christian policy, which is that the baby is not a person until it becomes "ensouled", which, by tradition, occurs a month after birth. In that month, the mother has the right of life and death, much like the Roman paterfamilias.

    210. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The funny thing is that they typically have no issues being organ recipients when there is a life threatening need...

      I am a responsible motorcycle rider, so I thought I would be an noble human and sign my donor card until I learned how many selfish double standards there were. I would gladly sign the donor card under 2 conditions: I can specify the age & income level of the recipient, and that the recipient signed their donor card 5 years prior to the transplant.

    211. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Republican?!? Try Chinese (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_transplantation_in_the_People's_Republic_of_China). Our *present* administration looks to China with awe.

    212. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Metabolife · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps your organs will save the life of a future serial killer who will murder 30 organ donors to help out people in need. :)

    213. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe they don't drown from looking up at the rain, but they do quite often drown in their own water bowls.

    214. Re:I have an organ donor card... by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      I don't think any doctor who has any doubts about the possible survival of a patient would declare him dead. In the few cases cited in the article, in the worst case it was a very unlikely resurrection and the patient kept severe neurological damage. In other cases, it was just a matter of "I think I might have seen a brain wave". The fear created by the article will kill far more people (due to lack of donors) than rogue doctors ever will.

    215. Re:I have an organ donor card... by smartr · · Score: 1

      There's absolutely NO POINT in banning compensation to the donor, because as soon as the organs are harvested, the people who have them can sell them. What do you think would change if organ donors received $500k in the US, except that the shortage of organs would fall?

      This could actually be a giant boon to making life insurance affordable. There's no guarantee any given death will usable organs at the time of death, but if it's mandatory to donate to get low cost - high pay out life insurance, you not only have a clear way of managing where the money will go but you can hedge your valuable organs with the rest of society.

    216. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      Sadly, that sort of treatment is typical, even at many big-name and research hospitals. Also typical is falsification of the records and lying to cover each other when they commit malpractice.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    217. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fiv years ago I had a heart attack. I was 99% sure I had a heart attack because I had all of the traditional signs of a heart attack: chest pains, shooting pain in my left arm, shooting pain in my neck. I went to the hospital. i did not take an ambulance. Yes, I know, stupid mistake, still....
      So I was in the emergency room and the doctors looked at me. I was handed from one doc to the next and told to wait until finally they reluctantly admitted me. At this point they could find no proof of a heart attack and truthfully they weren't looking real hard. There was a short EKG and lots of stethoscopes but that was it. When they admitted me they took blood and I spent the night in the hospital. Other than taking my blood every three hours no other examination was made. At 1 am the next morning a doctor came in and told me that this was my final blood test, that they could find no evidence of a heart attack and were discharging me that morning with a diagnosis of a panic attack and a referral to my GP for some anti anxiety meds. Diagnosis: nut case.

      Twenty minutes later the doctor apologized. I had a stent in place by eight o'clock that morning. The next week I was no longer a donor.

      Doctors, you see are not ordinary people. Doctors get to play God with the rest of us. There is one problem there: doctors are not gods. Doctors make mistakes. I have seen doctors err on the side of cost savings and time savings too often to trust a doctor to decide if I should be carved up like a sucking pig for parts. No thank you.

    218. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      If they have an active EEG, they're not brain-dead. There is an element of subjectivity to the other tests - no organs should be allowed to be taken for transplant without an EEG. It's not like it's an expensive or difficult test.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    219. Re:I have an organ donor card... by EdIII · · Score: 1

      I think you're wrong there as well. 100 years ago, doctors were also financially incented to perform unnecessary procedures, etc. because they got paid for work performed

      To a much, much, much, less degree though. Without medical insurance the doctor could only get as much money as the patient had on them. Considering this was well before lines of credit, and basically, access to financial resources orders of magnitude higher than what a patient had, I have a hard time buying that argument.

      The doctor ran the real risk of killing the patient with unnecessary procedures with no financial gain.

      As far as "quackery" goes, yes, that was rampant. However, I would be loathe to call those people doctors. If anything it was harder to find a real doctor back then.

      It's tempting to think that the idealized model of the country doctor, making house visits, black bag in hand, was an inherently more honest and trustworthy person. But I don't think there's any evidence of that.

      I would like to think that there is, but I see your point. I was never trying to compare the efficacy of doctors in the past versus the present, just their character.

      Maybe I am romanticizing the country doctors of the past. However, I see a real detriment and harm to the doctor/patient relationship with the ridiculous amounts of money and incentives in medicine today.

    220. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have organ donor checked on my drivers license and I won't be changing that. Something that might make it easier for my survivors though, is if some of that $2MM went to pay for my care so what ever just killed me doesn't bankrupt them. Instead they sign the papers to help someone else completely altruistically and some corporation makes $2MM. What a racket. Seems like a short road to Solent Green from a corporate perspective.

      I whole heartily (sorry for that pun) support organ donation but this discussion peels back the covers and show some of the less savory bits of the process. Why are we so intent on screwing each other for profit?

    221. Re:I have an organ donor card... by phantomlord · · Score: 1

      This was at a major medical university and its hospital. I specifically asked for as much physical documentation as I could, which is why I got the CDs of the CT/MRI. I don't know if their fancy EMR system tracks revision history on patient records. I also took pretty thorough notes while I was there and confronted both the Nurse Manager of the ER and the head of Emergency Medicine. I sent a letter to the CEO as well as the QA department describing in detail what happened and asking what they intend to do to correct the problems in the future. I have yet to hear back from either, though it has only been a month.

      Fortunately, I mostly know what I'm doing and my mom (divorced from my dad) works in another hospital, so what I don't know myself, she generally does. Most doctors end up asking me if I'm a doctor... Most patients don't have that type of family advocacy for them.

      On a side note, going back to the original brain aneurysm in 1998, my dad's lawyer met me at the hospital to arrange Power of Attorney papers before my dad's surgery. I mentioned the incompetence we had seen and he told me to never mention words like sue, lawsuit or malpractice in a hospital setting. If the staff overhears you, they go into CYA mode and will do everything by the book, even to a fault, and do absolutely nothing extraordinary, even if it could help.

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    222. Re:I have an organ donor card... by houghi · · Score: 1

      In Belgium everybody is a donor, unless you clearly state otherwise. So basically an opt-out, not an opt-in.
      I have not heard anyone being 'turned off' before everything was tried.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    223. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      Not that they are dishonest - though they often are - but their perceptions are of course skewed by their preconceptions. If they already believe the patient is dead or "better off dead", they will be less likely to see slight responses to the neurological tests and more likely to write off such responses as mere reflex or whatever. Doctors also often have delusions of competence, believing anything they say is true simply because they said it, even - no, especially - when the evidence is equivocal.

      There is very little risk to declaring a patient dead - if the patient dies, there is not going to be much evidence of the premature judgement; if the patient lives, usually everybody's happy about the "miracle". Even if there is a problem, other doctors will generally cover even egregious screw-ups, except in the most well-documented cases where that becomes too risky.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    224. Re:I have an organ donor card... by anyGould · · Score: 1

      Agreed - if my brain ain't running, I am happy to be considered "left the building". (OK, not happy, but I'm dead - I'm not *anything).

      The summary is misleading as well - the "lack of informed consent" is that they don't advertise the gory details of how they keep your meaty bits fresh while they part you out. And frankly, like sausage factories and laws, people aren't really interested in the details of surgery unless it directly applies to them.

      When I die I know I'm going to be parted out to help save people's lives. I don't need to know the details, since I'm not planning to be around for that part.

    225. Re:I have an organ donor card... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to be sitting around for years looking back and thinking "Oh man I wish those doctors tried harder to save me" I'll be dead.

      That's true of anything. Oh, you didn't get that heart transplant you desperately needed? Well after you're dead you won't care. A bit callous I think to dismiss people's fears like that.

    226. Re:I have an organ donor card... by anyGould · · Score: 1

      I think the point made by the article is that we need more rigor in determining that the person is dead before the organs are removed. Obviously, they'll be dead afterwards.

      There is no check for brain activity. They poke you a few times and remove your breather to see if you can breathe on your own. Note that a coma patient would fail some of those as well, and people *do* awake from comas. There is a big rush to declare you dead so that the organs can be harvested.

      A "brain dead" patient is a money pinata, waiting to be whacked.

      I'd be willing to believe that if the article had shown *any* evidence that an organ donor received different treatment "post-death" than non-donors.

      I'll also settle for something saying that the doctors in that hospital are getting paid for removing organs for donation (hence giving them any sort of incentive to cheat). Yeah, the body might be worth two million (which feels like an inflated number), but I'd bet the doctor in the ER isn't eligible to get any of it - and if they don't get paid extra, why would they cheat?

    227. Re:I have an organ donor card... by anyGould · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, it might be the first actual sensations you've experienced since you hit the coma. You might welcome the variety.

    228. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My quality of life post-transplant has been MUCH better then my quality of life while on dialysis, and I'm guessing better then it would be if I was dead but that's a guess. Being able to go about doing all the things I would normally do without have to spend 4 hours 3 days a week stuck in a chair doing dialysis which tires most people out badly enough that they can't do anything else the rest of they day. Or, if you're on peritoneal dialysis having to plug into a bag 4 times a day every day no matter where you are. Try going on a trip to visit your friends when you have to have over 100 lbs of fluids delivered to their house for your stay.
      The only downside to having a transplant I've encountered is having to take all the medicine, but honestly I take fewer pills after the transplant then I did before.

    229. Re:I have an organ donor card... by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      I do not believe in a god, but I don't believe in organ donation either. I don't generally see a high quality of life for the recipients. In most cases it's just prolonging the agony.

      I've got a buddy with Cystic Fibrosis. He got a double lung transplant, and went from being an invalid to mountain biking, snow boarding, and running.

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
    230. Re:I have an organ donor card... by idontgno · · Score: 1

      So, you're saying... OMG BAD PEOPLE MAY KILL ME FOR MY MONIEZ!

      This is neither news, nor medically relevant. And if Mom had just hired a rent-a-killer, the relative good of transplantable organs wouldn't have occured. So... in even your worst accusation, the outcome is better than thousands (millions?) of murders-for-gain that happen every year.

      How is this bad?

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    231. Re:I have an organ donor card... by rewt66 · · Score: 1

      I carry a donor card. Here's what it looks like to me: If I'm dead, you're welcome to the spare parts, because I don't need them anymore.

      And if you don't take them, well, I'm still just as dead. Yeah, it's tragic that I'm dead, but that's a tragedy that's already happened (in our hypothetical situation), and you can't make it any better by refusing my organs.

    232. Re:I have an organ donor card... by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Aren't the docs being paid by the RECIPIENTS insurance? I mean, trying to get payment from a dead guy is hard enough as it is...

      It's a nice idea, paying for organs conceptually, but it gets ugly pretty quick. What if I pay your estate for your kidney only to have it stop working 2 weeks later? Do I get my money back? From who? etc.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    233. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you think would change if organ donors received $500k in the US, except that the shortage of organs would fall?

      Society's perception could change — with laws to follow. For example, a person declaring a bankruptcy may be expected to (try to) sell their kidney (or an eye) to pay off his creditors. Bankruptcy-judges may even begin ordering such operations. Consequently, when applying for a loan, your kidney and other organs may be considered as part of your assets.

      I'm not sure, I wouldn't like this personally, but the thought gives me a pause. Most other people would reject such vision out of hand — for better or worse...

    234. Re:I have an organ donor card... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      You don't decide what religion other people are. If someone says they are Islamic, I believe them no matter how many of the precepts they follow. A big reason I stopped identifying as christian was other christians who had horrible beliefs and did horrible actions. My parents would say that they weren't "real" christians, but that is a cop-out.

      Nobody has ever followed any religion perfectly. It makes sense to form opinions about the adherents based on what they say and do regardless of doctrine.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    235. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and I'm surprised that anyone is surprised by any of this. Frankly... If I'm braindead, or even slightly above braindead so that I can breathe myself, just kill me, mm'kay? There is no way in hell that I'll ever be "me" again. The "me" is dead, and that zombie-corpse-thing is not "me" anymore. Help others, save the financial cost and emotional burden to my family (even though I live in Europe, I expect the financial cost to be low... )... Take them, help someone. I am dead if my neocortex is not functioning correctly anymore.

      What if your neocortex is only functioning 50%, 60% or 70%. Where do you draw the line between being dead and being a victim of doctor-assisted euthanasia?

    236. Re:I have an organ donor card... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      He died the year after that article was written, at 31 years post-transplant. His heart was still healthy, he died from cancer

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    237. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      If you're well and truly dead, cool - I'll be certainly grateful.

      I just don't want some jackass calling you dead prematurely just to harvest 'em.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    238. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to America !

    239. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I'm braindead, or even slightly above braindead so that I can breathe myself, just kill me, mm'kay?

      +10 Insightful and unequivocally correct.

    240. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not believe in a god, but I don't believe in organ donation either. I don't generally see a high quality of life for the recipients. In most cases it's just prolonging the agony. If the patients had more legs and the doctor had DVM after his name, this would have been called "inhumane".

      IAAD and strongly disagree - I have seen many patients with various organ donations (be they kidneys, livers, hearts, or corneas) who go on to have a great quality of life for many years, one they wouldn't have had without the donation. One of our friends has had 2 liver transplants: first one failed after one week, second one is still going strong 10 years later. She would have been dead 9.5 years ago if the 2nd one had not been available.

      We do need to treat our patients with respect and dignity: if they want to be donors, honor that; if they don't, honor that as well. But treating them with respect and dignity does not mean closing the door to organ donation.

    241. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WITNESS POSITION ON THERAPY

      Jehovah's Witnesses accept medical and surgical treatment. In fact, scores of them are physicians, even surgeons. But Witnesses are deeply religious people who believe that blood transfusion is forbidden for them by Biblical passages such as: "Only flesh with its soul--its blood--you must not eat" (Genesis 9:3-4); "[You must] pour its blood out and cover it with dust" (Leviticus 17:13-14); and "Abstain from... fornication and from what is strangled and from blood" (Acts 15:19-21).

      While these verses are not stated in medical terms, Witnesses view them as ruling out transfusion of whole blood, packed RBCs, and plasma, as well as WBC and platelet administration. However, Witnesses' religious understanding does not absolutely prohibit the use of components such as albumin, immune globulins, and hemophiliac preparations; each Witness must decide individually if he can accept these.

      Witnesses believe that blood removed from the body should be disposed of, so they do not accept autotransfusion of predeposited blood. Techniques for intraoperative collection or hemodilution that involve blood storage are objectionable to them. However, many Witnesses permit the use of dialysis and heart-lung equipment (non-blood-prime) as well as intraoperative salvage where the extracorporeal circulation is uninterrupted; the physician should consult with the individual patient as to what his conscience dictates.

      The Witnesses do not feel that the Bible comments directly on organ transplants; hence, decisions regarding cornea, kidney, or other tissue transplants must be made by the individual Witness.

      (I typed that from copy; any mistakes found in the text would have been introduced during such process.)

    242. Re:I have an organ donor card... by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Already happens, just in China and India. Did you know that I can buy a kidney from someone in one of those countries for $25K USD? Less if I ask less questions. And the whole time I would get to recover in a resort hospital.

      To think its not already happening is naivety. To legalize it brings proper regulation.

    243. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 1

      Well, I was under the impression that it was possible for a person to be non-responsive to those stimuli for other reasons. Wikipedia states that "barbiturate overdose, alcohol intoxication, sedative overdose, hypothermia, hypoglycemia, coma or chronic vegetative states" may mimic brain death, although there's no indication of how a differential diagnosis would be made in all those cases.

      Still, you make a good point; I trust that medical professionals have honestly and diligently considered all the angles, and that their criteria for death are the most accurate. I guess I was really just surprised to hear that they can determine the function of the brain with such simple, noninvasive tests.

    244. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who are you quoting about chickens being the stupidest birds in the world? Have you ever watcvhed or been to a chicken training group/party? I have a pet chicken (and yes she is a pet and egg supplier) and there is no way that chickens can be called stupid. I have seen a chicken learn the meaning of commands by watching how my dogs behaved to verbal cues and adopting these behaviours as her own. So whoever you quoted is a dipstick. I do agree sort of about the Kardashians but maybe Snookie wins?

    245. Re:I have an organ donor card... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The doctor could be thinking. Should I give it one more try or start pulling out kidneys? Umm... Lets go for kidneys. :-)

    246. Re:I have an organ donor card... by snero3 · · Score: 1

      Great attituded! Love it!

      --
      It said "windows 98 or better" so I installed Linux
    247. Re:I have an organ donor card... by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          Morbid curiosity makes me want to ask, but I'll avoid that. Congratulations on surviving. We all have plenty for living to do before we're not.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    248. Re:I have an organ donor card... by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      The God of the average Septic will guarantee you an eternity of torment for expressing such a non-religious point of view.

      While we're burning together, I'll pour burning oil on your back, if you'll do the same for me.

      See you in someone else's Hell. Or not.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    249. Re:I have an organ donor card... by jawtheshark · · Score: 1

      Given what the average God offers, I'd prefer to burn in their hell than to praise their pompous asses all day long. Hand me the bottle of oil, it's my turn to rub your back.

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
    250. Re:I have an organ donor card... by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Society's perception could change — with laws to follow. For example, a person declaring a bankruptcy may be expected to (try to) sell their kidney (or an eye) to pay off his creditors. Bankruptcy-judges may even begin ordering such operations.

      I don't think so. Mutilating living people such as by removing their kidney is a human rights violation. And should be highly illegal.

      With narrowly carved exceptions; medical purposes. Even voluntary donation of a living person's kidney for no compensation to the person is highly questionable.

      This is all very different from someone making organs available upon death

    251. Re:I have an organ donor card... by therealkevinkretz · · Score: 1

      That's not very ugly. Insurance companies will often pay doctors and hospitals for a second transplant if a first fails - what's the difference?

    252. Re:I have an organ donor card... by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      what's the difference?

      The difference is the doctors and hospitals are not the suppliers they are simply the workers - they get paid in any circumstance. Paying the donor's family for the donor's organs is an entirely different, and new, scenario.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    253. Re:I have an organ donor card... by therealkevinkretz · · Score: 1

      I understand the various roles played in the transaction. You said that payment for the donor organs woud "get ugly pretty quick" - but there's no difference between reimbursement for the organ and payment for the surgeon and for the hospital.

      You ask what happens if a donor kidney stops working. What happens now? Does the surgeon forfeit his fee or salary? Does the hospital forgive the bill for the equipment and procedure? No. Nor would a donor if the organ were rejected or later failed.

      So again, I ask: what's the difference?

    254. Re:I have an organ donor card... by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Lets go with the obligatory car analogy:

      If I need a new tire (my spare is currently full size...natch ) I buy a tire and have my mechanic install it on the car.

      What if that tire is defective? I either get a refund or a new tire for free with likely the same installation costs.

      If we substitute kidney for tire and doctor for mechanic, the only difference is right now, we don't pay for the kidney (tire) itself, only the hospital and doctor 'installation' services.

      If you want to now start paying for the kidney...that starts creating incentives to lie about how 'good' the donor kidney is. Do you want Ozzy Ozbourne's kidney? Or Keith Richards? Or some unknown boozer's liver?

      If the organ was warranted to be 'good' and it wasn't due to lying or other negligence and you paid them $400,000 dollars, you wouldn't want that money back?

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    255. Re:I have an organ donor card... by therealkevinkretz · · Score: 1

      You're not getting a new tire; you're getting a used tire. You keep pushing the 'defective merchandise' analogy though I've addressed it already.

      Then you imply that there would be concern for quality of the organ were it to be paid for that somehow doesn't exist now. I think it's silly to suggest that haggling over the cost based on its 'quality' would create more focus on that quality than would the prospect of having to rely on the organ to live for decades.

      Organ function can be easily tested. An organ that met some standard of acceptability (which donated organs are also subject to) would be sold from the perspective of the seller on an as-is basis.

    256. Re:I have an organ donor card... by RancidPeanutOil · · Score: 1

      what the hell...? I don't think you're following the thread very well. I was responding to someone's post. Good hussle, though.

  2. I'm not dead yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure when I'll be dead, but I know I'm getting better and that I feel happy.

  3. All the way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think all the way dead is probably the best kind of dead...

  4. THe Real Quesion is... by chill · · Score: 5, Funny

    The real question is how fast will this thread deteriorate into a Monty Python quote fest?

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't want to go in the cart!

    2. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or Soylent Green, recycling the rest. Leftovers again?

      The brain dead are dysfunctional. Are the homeless dysfunctional?
      There go the scoops.

    3. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by TheABomb · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sooner than Princess Bride, apparently. I weep for you people.

      --
      MSIE: The world's most standards-complaint web browser.
    4. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by game+kid · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't be so pessimistic. Always look on the bright side of life!

      --
      You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
    5. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bring out ya Monty Python quotes!

    6. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 2

      Sooner than Princess Bride, apparently. I weep for you people.

      The Princess Bride does have some rather on-subject quotes, especially "he's only MOSTLY dead!" But the article doesn't mention the doctors digging around in one's pockets, looking for change.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    7. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by PPH · · Score: 1

      No, no! He's not dead, he's, he's restin'!

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    8. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or Simpsons.

      "He was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. He was then taken to a better hospital where his condition was upgraded to 'alive.' "

    9. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by iniquitous · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Two days after I proposed to my wife, she was t-boned on a major street. She broke both clavicles, cracked a couple ribs, and fractured her sacrum. Unconscious, she was airlifted to the hospital.

      When she came to, her first mumbled words were, "Not dead yet!"

      P.S. She recovered completely.

    10. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by Salgak1 · · Score: 2

      You obviously haven't looked into the thriving business of medical debt recovery. After they go through your pockets, they start trying to get into the pockets of surviving relatives...

    11. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by chill · · Score: 1

      A keeper!

      Congrats!

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    12. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Hey Fred, we've got an eater!

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    13. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "But the article doesn't mention the doctors digging around in one's pockets, looking for change."

      Because we are not talking here about *that* kind of dead people. After all, the ones we are talking here are good not onlyto look for change, we can take their organs too!

    14. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Of course not, they would never do such a thing. That's what the billing department is for. They'll go after your relatives pockets too.

    15. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by Ly4 · · Score: 1

      Cool story!

      Well, here on Slashdot it's a cool story - anywhere else, it would probably come off as a bit crazy :-).

    16. Re:THe Real Quesion is... by tobiah · · Score: 1

      And I'd be a jerk for noting its coolness.

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  5. When no longer alive by markdavis · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >"When Are You Dead?"

    Easy- when you can no longer be made to be alive anymore :)

    (Sounds silly, but it is kinda valid- can't restart heart, and/or can't restart breathing, and/or can't ever recover brain function/consciousness). Of course, in reality, it can be a bit more difficult to define. Personally, I think it is all about the brain. If the brain is irreversibly damaged to the point there will never be consciousness, I don't care how functional the rest of the body is, that person is DEAD.

    1. Re:When no longer alive by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      "When Are You Dead?"

      According to copyright law, 70 years after you've died.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
  6. Whack 'em! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I say whack 'em for good measure. A few good whacks and they're dead for sure!

  7. I think I'll go for a walk. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grbSQ6O6kbs

    Interesting clip from a documentary on this subject.

  8. I feel fine... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [Cue Monty Python Music]

    The Dead Collector: Bring out yer dead.
    [a man puts a body on the cart]
    Large Man with Dead Body: Here's one.
    The Dead Collector: That'll be ninepence.
    The Dead Body That Claims It Isn't: I'm not dead.
    The Dead Collector: What?
    Large Man with Dead Body: Nothing. There's your ninepence.
    The Dead Body That Claims It Isn't: I'm not dead.
    The Dead Collector: 'Ere, he says he's not dead.
    Large Man with Dead Body: Yes he is.
    The Dead Body That Claims It Isn't: I'm not.
    The Dead Collector: He isn't.
    Large Man with Dead Body: Well, he will be soon, he's very ill.
    The Dead Body That Claims It Isn't: I'm getting better.
    Large Man with Dead Body: No you're not, you'll be stone dead in a moment.
    The Dead Collector: Well, I can't take him like that. It's against regulations.
    The Dead Body That Claims It Isn't: I don't want to go on the cart.
    Large Man with Dead Body: Oh, don't be such a baby.
    The Dead Collector: I can't take him.
    The Dead Body That Claims It Isn't: I feel fine....

    (I feel happy. I feel happy. !!!)

    1. Re:I feel fine... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. we posted at exactly the same time. What are the chances of two ACs commenting on a somewhat related story with the exact same classic movie reference at the exact same time? It's got to be like, 1 in 10 or something.

  9. My death will not be compromised! by LighterShadeOfBlack · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Even though they compromise only 1% of deaths [...]"

    Comprise. The word is 'comprise'.

    --
    Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, and stupid comments are intentional.
    1. Re:My death will not be compromised! by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      Grammer gnazi with an e

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    2. Re:My death will not be compromised! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I went to hospital once and they compromised my death. Bastards!!! I'll never go there the next time I need assisted suicide.

  10. Interesting by dontPanik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Interesting article, but I'm going to categorize it under scare-mongering. I'll accept the next to nothing possibility of being still alive while they take my organs, if that means saving other's lives.

    --
    "Computers are useless. They can only give you answers." - Pablo Picasso
    1. Re:Interesting by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Sounds like you should be directing the next Saw movie ;-)

    2. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... altruistic.

      In an ideal world where those being saved are part of the anonymous masses, little Jimmy or Jane, or perhaps their mother or father, yes I'd feel pretty good knowing that the end of my life meant the continuation of theirs... ...but how would you feel if those lives being saved were the likes of Steve Jobs and other ultra rich? People who made a "donation" to some hospital in order to get to the head of the list... A hospital administration earning millions while they wield control over who lives and dies... The doctors earning millions feeling safe in the fact that they personally don't make the donor decisions, they're just the butcher, they didn't actually kill the cow... and there you are... the cow.

  11. The real question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how rich is the guy who wants your organs?

  12. Yessss! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yessss! When my brain no longer works, I want to be asked if it is broken enough to consider me dead! Or, better, have my stupid relatives decide that!

    Out of all the alternatives, I would rather rely on a doctor's decision.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  13. The article specifically states that the doctors feel it is unlikely the body feels pain, but two forms of light anesthetic are still used.

    1. Re:Lies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      No it says A doctor does so, not ALL doctors do so.

  14. 2 million for who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, if it's 2 million per body, do my family see any of that?

    1. Re:2 million for who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they did you'd already be dead!

    2. Re:2 million for who? by uncqual · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately no.

      There is so much whining about "needing more donors", but the really easy way to insure that is to allow for payment for organs. I think quite a few people will sign donor cards if they think their family may get $50K for their liver or something. We might want to have an additional level of review (a panel of Independence doctors and more exhaustive tests) to declare brain death for a "donor for pay" to reduce the chances of abuse.

      Market based solution FTW.

      --
      Why is there an "insightful" mod and why isn't it "-1"? If I wanted insight, I wouldn't be reading /.
    3. Re:2 million for who? by AK+Marc · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's a lie in the article fabricated to shock. The cost of a transplant is $750,000, but they don't mention what that is, and then imply that's the cost of the organ. That's the cost of the doctors and drugs and tests and such to put an organ into someone, assuming the organ is free. Add $50,000 for the organ, and it'd move the cost to $800,000. Moving organs is expensive, and the article is written by an anti-transplant person trying to dissuade others from donating.

    4. Re:2 million for who? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it would be nice to think that my family won't be impoverished paying for my final treatments when so many make so much money from it. The least they could do is take care of the bills.

    5. Re:2 million for who? by tobiah · · Score: 1

      Only if they inherited the patents on your body.

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
    6. Re:2 million for who? by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

      Lots of good arguments against selling organs exist, notably the corruption one. Taking money out of the equation makes it a little easier to avoid the situation of rich people taking advantage of poor people and paying them to die. A better solution would be to waive all medical expenses in the keeping of the donor corpse alive (before it became a corpse, of course). That way, you get some value out of it without getting any money out of it. A better way would be to take care of every single funeral cost for the bits that they want to bury.

      While I *do* have a signed donor card, it does occur to me that if there's $2m floating around that goes to hospitals to transport organs from donor corpses to recipient patients, then they may as well make it $2.2m and use that extra $200k to free my family from the burden of funeral expenses. Once again, you get value out of it without anyone giving out negotiable currency.

      All that people want is a fair deal, and if donors see $2m going around for their organs while their family languishes in poverty after an expensive and long illness, they're understandably bitter and would rather feed their organs to the worms than give it away.

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
  15. It's a fair question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are some people walking around today who were declared brain-dead at one point... ...and not just the zombies.

    1. Re:It's a fair question... by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      Seeing as there are many people who willingly watched 2 Twilight movies I'd have to say there are many people who can be considered braindead. Most would complain if you used their organs for a usefull purpose though.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
  16. consider me dead by blindbat · · Score: 1

    If I end up with *severe head trauma* please DO NOT resuscitate.

  17. Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by theodp · · Score: 2

    From the article: "Even some of the sharpest critics of the brain-death criteria argue that there is no possibility that donors will be in pain during the harvesting of their organs...But BHCs[beating-heart cadavers]-who don't receive anesthetics during an organ harvest operation-react to the scalpel like inadequately anesthetized live patients, exhibiting high blood pressure and sometimes soaring heart rates. Doctors say these are simply reflexes." OK, but didn't we once say something similar about operating on babies without anesthesia?

    1. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by jamesh · · Score: 1

      It does seem kind of dumb. If someone is paying $750k for an organ, why can't they pay $751 so the patient can get the anesthetic? Given the number of people who appear to be turned off by the idea of going without it it might be worth it. It also reduces the chance that the patient would sit up during the procedure and demand their liver back.

    2. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by claar · · Score: 1

      While I was able to find actual sources for your operating on babies claim, it's hard to trust an article that also claims "most cancers are easily treated with low-cost herbs and nutritional therapies"..

      --
      I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous...
    3. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It does seem kind of dumb. If someone is paying $750k for an organ, why can't they pay $751 so the patient can get the anesthetic?

      Seems more likely that there are medical reasons rather than cost reasons, perhaps wanting the harvested bits to be as free from anything that might cause complications in their next home as possible.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    4. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True... but I remember a doctor telling me in the 80's that babies do not experience pain, that's why circumcisions are done at or near birth.

      There are several mentions of studies at Johns Hopkins in 1917 (author Blanton). Blanton had a paper on Polio in 1917 at Johns Hopkins but I couldn't find the study on infant pain. Supposedly, this was one study that found infant pain responses to be real and measurable, but it was not powerful enough to change the general thought on infants and pain response.

      www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-05-08-babies-pain_x.htm

      http://www.circumcisionquotes.com/index20.html

      At the bottom of the above article, it becomes apparent that it was a much talked about topic in the 80's due to the number of referenced articles.

    5. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by sjames · · Score: 1

      One of the doctors in TFA indicated that he DOES use fentanyl just in case, so apparently it' OK to do so.

    6. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Seems more likely that there are medical reasons rather than cost reasons

      Like what? Do you think the patient reciving the organ doesn't have anesthesia in their blood supply? It obviously doesn't interfere with the surgery or the function of the organ.

    7. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's one of the very few things in that article. The few things that are factual got bundled with a bunch of BS. I mean, the guy claims that heart bypass and stomach bypass are in the same category. The fuck?

    8. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I was able to find actual sources for your operating on babies claim, it's hard to trust an article that also claims "most cancers are easily treated with low-cost herbs and nutritional therapies"..

      But it's true -- very easy to treat cancer with herbs. Maybe not effective, but certainly easy.

    9. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      I'd guess it'd have to be the same anestesic, beacuse mixing that stuff is dangerous.
      However: that can be solved with a simple phonecall.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    10. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      it's hard to trust an article that also claims "most cancers are easily treated with low-cost herbs and nutritional therapies"..

      LOL big understatement! That's when you hit Ctrl-W.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    11. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the very article you linked to:

      "Today, by the way, the theory of mental disorders has shifted from "pus in the organs" to "chemical imbalances in the brain" which are treated by toxic synthetic chemicals known as prescription drugs. Different era, different terminology. Same con."

      Think you could maybe link us to an article that isn't full of homeopathic, anti-medicine, naturalistic horseshit?

    12. Re:Take my organs, but how 'bout some anesthetic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I worry that the reason that donors are not anaesthetised is because doctors want to convince the public that donors are 'really dead'. Dead people don't live in their bodies any more and can't feel pain. If they start anaesthetising donors then the public is going to start wanting to know why it is necessary.

      Organ donation requires that 'brain death is real death'. If it isn't, then the whole thing becomes ethically more problematic. Organ donation saves lives and therefore I worry that doctors have convinced themselves to act as if brain dead people are completely dead and can't feel pain, despite the evidence to the contrary.

      I have read some pretty horrible stories from medical professionals about the reactions of donors when organ donation surgery is performed. These can go far beyond high blood pressure - people who are brain dead have even been known to move around during surgery. Because of these experiences, some doctors DO anaesthetise donors.

      Personally, unless I have a cast-iron guarantee that I'll be anaesthetised during the surgery and during whatever remains of the process of dying, I am not willing to be a donor. The idea that doctors are cutting people up without anaesthetic when there is even a tiny possibility that those people might still be able to feel pain is pretty horrifying.

      I am quite willing to believe that there is a state called brain death at which it is impossible for me to ever be alive again. And should I reach this state then theroetically I would be willing to donate my organs. But I am not convinced that I wouldn't be aware in some way of the required surgery.

      Anaesthetic for organ donation should be mandatory.

  18. Scary by St.Creed · · Score: 3, Informative

    At least one of the cases described in the linked article should be grounds for legal action, at the very least dismissal of these surgeons from their jobs. Case #2 seems a collection of mistakes and errors: was permission granted by or even asked from the family? Dismissing objections of one of the teammembers? Designated target dies before even receiving liver and the donor dies as well? I mean... this sounds like a case for a law school, not for medical school.

    However... most donations are rigged with very careful procedures precisely because of all the legal pitfalls. Given the good it does to help with the mourning process of the family of the donor, and the good it does on the other side, there is a powerful drive to make sure we improve this procedure.

    And also: more research on stem cells is desperately needed.

    --
    Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    1. Re:Scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      this sounds like a case for a law school, not for medical school.

      Exactly. Get the donors from law school.

  19. Pure scare-mongering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This is completely nonsense. No doctor goes around hoping to declare patients braindead so that we can take your organs. At least in my state, only a board-certified neurologist can even make the determination of brain death. The exam for braindeath may seem "simple" but it test the most basic neurological reflexes, and you can only be declared brain dead if those reflexes are not present.

    And as for "Doctors don't have to tell you or your relatives what they will do to your body during an organ harvest "
    It's called an organ harvest. I think most people realize that they're going to have to do surgery to get the organs out...

    1. Re:Pure scare-mongering by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 2

      This is completely nonsense. No doctor goes around hoping to declare patients braindead so that we can take your organs.

      Yes, clearly every doctor in the world is an uncorruptable paragon of virtue and empathy. It's ridiculous to think that anyone could ever possibly become a doctor because they are motivated by greed and willing to take ethical short cuts as a result.

    2. Re:Pure scare-mongering by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      It would be strange to become a doctor for that, there are many FAR easier and faster ways to get rich for those willing to take ethical shortcuts.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  20. No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My wife is a physician and she is not an organ donor and when we got married she made me opt out of organ donation.

    She did a rotation in one of the largest and most respected shock-trauma units in the country (University of Maryland) as part of her residency and says that as soon as they wheel somebody in with head injury trauma the team goes to work to save them but at the same time one member of the team starts typing the organs for possible transplant.

    She says she won't sign the card because she doesn't want somebody trying to "save" her when there are hundreds of thousands of dollars involved if it goes the other way.

    1. Re:No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      She says she won't sign the card because she doesn't want somebody trying to "save" her when there are hundreds of thousands of dollars involved if it goes the other way.

      Shocking. This makes me glad to live in europe

    2. Re:No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why I'm not an organ donor. It's not because I'm misanthropic, but when there's that much money involved in anything, I don't want to be a part of it. I don't think it's difficult to imagine a scenario under which your organ donor status is used against you - nobody says that these doctors have to be honest about whether or not you're actually braid-dead. Being taken to a hospital is a frightening enough experience with all the bureaucratic nonsense that goes on; I don't want to worry about someone "legally" harvesting my organs as well.

    3. Re:No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Your wife is a physician and doesn't realize that organ harvesting and transplanting is a very time sensitive procedure? Typing the organs right away, even before death is declared, saves a bunch of precious time that if wasted could lead to a non-viable organ in the end. Just preparing for possible contingencies is not nefarious, it's logical. In the end, if the patient recovers, then hooray for the patient! We move on to the next possible organ donor.

      The system is not evil, doctors are not ghouls just waiting for the next big organ score. And personally, I feel that if you are morally opposed to organ donation, you should be morally opposed to organ reception; that is to say, feel free to opt out of the system, but your name should be on the bottom of the UNOS list if the time comes you ever need the help of said ghoulish transplant doctors.

    4. Re:No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds kinda selfish to me. If there's even a 10% chance there's a mistake and they take your organs even though you'd would've recovered, and it typically saves 2 lives, humanity has come out ahead.

    5. Re:No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She did a rotation in one of the largest and most respected shock-trauma units in the country (University of Maryland) as part of her residency and says that as soon as they wheel somebody in with head injury trauma the team goes to work to save them but at the same time one member of the team starts typing the organs for possible transplant.

      With her education, she should understand why that's none - it's not because of money, it's because there is very little time.
       

      She says she won't sign the card because she doesn't want somebody trying to "save" her when there are hundreds of thousands of dollars involved if it goes the other way.

      It's a free country and she has the right to choose bias over facts, but doesn't let her mislead you into believing she's made he choice on any other basis.

    6. Re:No Organ Doner Here by aXis100 · · Score: 1

      You do realise that regardless of the money, there are a whole bunch of people with potentially long and fruitfull lives that will benefit from the donation.

      You can argue that there is financial bias, but it still does a lot of medical good.

    7. Re:No Organ Doner Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      "The system is not evil, doctors are not ghouls just waiting for the next big organ score."

      This is your OPINION.

      Actual events I have personally witnessed indicate that you are far from correct.

      I work as an ER MD in a large metropolitan hospital. I could tell you stories
      which would give you nightmares for the rest of your life. I am not, nor will I
      ever be, an organ donor, because I do not want any incentives attached to
      whether I live or die.

      I've seen people "let go" when they could have been saved. You cannot
      begin to imagine how much you carry such things around with you for the rest
      of your life. Let's just say that your view of the "system" not being "evil" is
      naive in the extreme, and leave it at that. Now if you will all excuse me I
      need a good stiff drink.

    8. Re:No Organ Doner Here by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      She says she won't sign the card because she doesn't want somebody trying to "save" her when there are hundreds of thousands of dollars involved if it goes the other way.

      She's a doctor. Just ask her if she basis her decisions on what makes the most money. If she doesn't, they why does she think she is "better" than the doctors she learned under?

    9. Re:No Organ Doner Here by slimjim8094 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Good for you for being an ER doc. I have a lot of respect for you guys. Having said that, I'm an EMT, and I've seen stuff that would curl your hair. You get them after we've pulled their various parts out of the car (not always at the same time) and cleaned them up for you.

      I've gotta say, I know a bunch of docs at one of the best trauma centers in the country, and they are without exception good people fighting a forever-losing game against death. There's all sorts of people who "could" be saved - but for what? It's not a money thing at least to the folks I know - they just don't see fighting to keep the patient in a coma on a vent for a few more days as appropriate - to the patient, or their families.

      Since I'm sure you'd shit all over any hypothetical I offered, here's a real case: Massive car accident on the highway, one guy didn't have his seatbelt on and went partway through the windshield. Massive head injuries (open skull and brain tissue on the windshield), and cardiac arrest. He was our only "red" patient, but we didn't do CPR.

      Now first of all, the standing protocols in my state is "do not perform CPR if it was caused by a traumatic cardiac arrest", so we were doing right by that. Notwithstanding, we perhaps could have pumped him with some lactated Ringer's, tubed him, and performed compressions. We may have even brought back a pulse (his brainstem appeared intact). But for what?

      Let's say you are that guy's wife, or brother, or son. Which is better? "He died in a horrible car accident" or "He's in a coma, it doesn't look good"? Sure, the doctor can say up and down that he won't make it, that the windshield ripped out parts of his cerebrum and people don't come back from that, etc - but it doesn't matter, most people get their hopes up because he isn't actually dead. Then a few days later the guy dies, or even worse, his next-of-kin has to make the decision to give up. If it were me, I know which one I'd rather have, for me and my family. Get it over with and leave it at that. Don't stretch it out to various stages.

      And yes, those things will stay with me for the rest of my life. But we still made the right call.

      I don't know what you mean by saved. Perhaps you mean the guy coding could've been stabilized, but they gave up, or perhaps you mean the terminal cancer patient wasn't vigorously resuscitated. If "save" means "most likely could've returned to a mostly-normal life", that's a tragedy worthy of big punishment. But if "save" means "kept alive for a few more hours/days", I can't say I share your disgust at the doctor having some mercy to everybody involved and just letting it end naturally.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    10. Re:No Organ Doner Here by mgoff · · Score: 1

      Do you also agree, irrevocably, to never accept a donated organ for yourself or your minor children? Do you also agree to refuse drugs and therapies developed via research requiring donated organs? If so, no problem.

    11. Re:No Organ Doner Here by jrumney · · Score: 1

      What exactly are these hundreds of thousands of dollars for? Do any members of the team treating the patient get a bonus for producing a transplantable organ? Or is this all expenses - mostly going to drug companies for their patented drugs used during the recovery phase for the transplant recipient? You seem to be suggesting that there is a conflict of interest here, but I'm not really sure there is.

    12. Re:No Organ Doner Here by mk3k · · Score: 1

      "Bring him back for what?" you say?? His organs you insensitive clod!

    13. Re:No Organ Doner Here by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      This guy in particular had some pretty nasty abdominal injuries as well (probably a lacerated liver, which would be why he bled out).

      We're more likely is to get people who have had "normal" heart attacks, but not received attention in time (or it didn't help) and they're brain-dead from oxygen deprivation (about 10 minutes without adequate circulation). You can still get a ROSC (return of spontaneous circulation) in them, not likely, but it's enough to keep the organs alive. We don't really distinguish between people who've "gotten a pulse back" and those that survive to discharge, but it's a pretty low percentage. The remainder are typically your pool of potential donors, and they end up there because they re-code in the hospital, or are brain-dead when we bring them in. There's also other ways to become brain dead - we had a guy who was on opiate painkillers that went out drinking and passed out in bed on his face... he was still asleep at about 4pm and had been hypoxic for 12 hours. He had fixed pupils and insufficient respirations (though spontaneous) so he would've been in a very bad way, if he ever made it out of a coma.

      The whole brain death thing is, as they say, above my pay grade. If they match my criteria for resuscitation (pretty much nontraumatic arrest without obvious signs of death, like rigor mortis, lividity, room temperature, decomposition, etc) then I do CPR. The paramedics we work with can hook up their EKG and find a terminal rhythm (asystole, and some others) and pronounce. If the guy is an organ donor, we'd typically continue compressions to the hospital when we might otherwise not, in the hope that they'd do some good, even if we can't save his life (compressions do provide blood flow).

      People die, and we all do our best. Usually, it's not enough, and you have to come to terms with that. But it doesn't mean you fight any less hard, because sometimes you're able to help, and that's the best feeling in the world - and also because if you ever have a suspicion that you could've done just a little bit better for somebody, it'd eat you away. Cops, EMTs, medics, nurses, docs - I don't know any of them that are inclined to just "give up" because they just don't want to deal with it, and especially not because of money. On the rare chance that a donor comes in, and is a match, the docs are ecstatic that they got somebody off the transplant list and kept them from dying - not that they got paid to do the operation.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    14. Re:No Organ Doner Here by chihowa · · Score: 1

      My wife is a physician and she is not an organ donor and when we got married she made me opt out of organ donation.

      She did a rotation in one of the largest and most respected shock-trauma units in the country (University of Maryland) as part of her residency and says that as soon as they wheel somebody in with head injury trauma the team goes to work to save them but at the same time one member of the team starts typing the organs for possible transplant.

      She says she won't sign the card because she doesn't want somebody trying to "save" her when there are hundreds of thousands of dollars involved if it goes the other way.

      Exactly. I'm absolutely willing to donate my organs when I die, and I've instructed my wife and family to do that. But I want somebody that I trust to be in charge of the decision of when to write me off and start harvesting organs. The hospitals have too much of a financial stake in selling off my parts (or selling off the operations that install my parts). Both my wife and I have had experiences with corpses kept alive too long on life-support, too, so we've assured each other that we won't keep the other on machines after they're dead.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  21. Answer by bXTr · · Score: 5, Funny

    When you stop pounding at the inside of your coffin.

    --
    It's a very dark ride.
    1. Re:Answer by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      haha, wish I had mod points.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    2. Re:Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saw "Premature burial" a few times in the '70s. Great horror movie. And no monster; no blood and guts.

    3. Re:Answer by nbritton · · Score: 1

      If you want to get an idea of what it would be like to be buried alive, watch Buried... http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1462758/

  22. Read: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can zombies be used as organ donors against their will?

  23. Sounds good by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 2

    That sounds like pretty good news to me because the worst thing I can imagine is being held alive artificially in a coma.

    So yes, please don't hesitate to let me die after a severe head trauma and give my organs to others. Thanks!

  24. How dead do you want patients to be? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dead enough not to sue.

  25. Not intended as humor: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I'm so close to dead that doctors have to debate about whether I'm dead or alive, I'd just as soon one of them ensures I am completely and permanently dead. Again, you can make all the Monty Python jokes you want, but this is not humor. I mean it.

  26. Do not resuscitate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is tattooed on my chest

  27. Dr. Crippen, eh? by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Riiiight.... Seems legit to me

    1. Re:Dr. Crippen, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm surprised there's only ONE 'Dr.Crippen' riff here... Well done, you!

  28. It's free by Eggbloke · · Score: 1

    >$20 billion per year business, with average recipients charged $750,000 for a transplant
    No? It's free, at least while the NHS still exists. I'm happy to give my organs whether I'm brain dead or really dead. I'm not that important and saving a life is one of the most amazing things I can think of to do in my life.

    --
    I care not for your karma and your mod points.
    1. Re:It's free by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I find the implication that some group of people are getting rich off organ transplants bizarre. Like the CEO of Organs R Us is waiting around for the next motorbike accident because yacht wax and monocle polish doesn't pay for itself.

      Like space travel, organ transplantation is routine, but it's also still quite hard. Apart from the US (where the price of anything medical is artificially inflated by the health insurance cartel), nobody is getting rich off organ transplants.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    2. Re:It's free by jackbird · · Score: 1

      He's not waiting for the next accident, he's tossing handfuls of caltrops everywhere!

    3. Re:It's free by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Just because someone else pays on your behalf doesn't mean it was free. The heart transplant surgeon isn't a volunteer worker..

  29. Eh, don't keep me around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have a cousin who years ago was in a massive car accident and thrown through the windshield. Full coma and braindead. His family kept hope for a while and then had the plug pulled. Shockingly he kept breathing which seemed to give everyone hope. Here we are 15 years later and he is just as much brain dead as he was then but his direct family has been absoluetly through the ringer and his parents are absoutely broke. Looking back on what that has done to his family and what his quality of life is, I would absolutely say go ahead with the donation and make someone else's life better.

    1. Re:Eh, don't keep me around by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But have they learned to wear their seat belts?

  30. To the government... by trum4n · · Score: 1

    ... you're legally dead the instant you stop paying taxes.

    1. Re:To the government... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      These days if you don't pay taxes you're in a key demographic for vote buying.

  31. Re:No Organ Doner There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .. she [the doctor] doesn't want somebody trying to "save" her when there are hundreds of thousands of dollars involved if it goes the other way.

    I see, but she doesn't mind working on the other side of the equation even though the profit motive steers her choices regarding the nature the treatment she might prescribe? Either profit belongs in "the system" or it doesn't. There is no in between.

  32. Slippery Slope? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do people really still think slippery slopes are legitimate criticisms?

  33. donors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heck go to any session of congress and you will find plenty of brain dead specimens. Of course most of their livers are probably not much good for anything...you know just like the congressmen themselves.

  34. who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if i'm that f*ed up, i don't want to wake up anyway... cripes, i could come back like that Libtard Giffords

  35. I want my CUT! by erroneus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Okay, read that in whatever punny way you like but after seeing the prices organ donors' organs fetch, I want to be an organ donor but I want to be paid for it NOW.

    The only one who doesn't benefit is the donor!! How wrong is that?! If I am going to be a donor and the medical industry is going to benefit from it, then they need to share that benefit with me. Sure. Put me on a health plan and require me to live within certain healthy standards. I don't drink that much anyway. I don't do drugs. I don't smoke. I don't run around having casual sex either... (not my choice really... I think I would if I could.) I'm a pretty healthy candidate all in all.

    I know by my asking for this I'm setting myself up for one of the opening scenes from Monty Python, but I'm certainly not going to volunteer myself while other profit from it.

    1. Re:I want my CUT! by nbauman · · Score: 1
    2. Re:I want my CUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What you forget is that most people with an organ donor card will in fact not donate any organs, because their circumstances of death make it impossible.
      Why would anybody want to pay you for a "service" you are most likely to never provide?

    3. Re:I want my CUT! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      ...and yet I somehow believe the business would continue to make massive profits.

      The fact is, if donors were compensated fairly for volunteering, there would be more volunteers and the health requirements of a volunteer program would result in better general health. Imagine being paid to be healthy.

      Insurance is, after all, payment to a company for services which may never be required. How is this any different?

    4. Re:I want my CUT! by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 1

      Exactly right. By the sounds of it, not drinking, no drugs, no smoking, healthy life-style and no casual sex he's liable to die peacefully in his bed at 90 when his organs are on their last legs anyway.

    5. Re:I want my CUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I don't get a cut, my family damn well should! As it exists today my family would be left with an obscene bill, meanwhile the hospital rakes in a couple million.

    6. Re:I want my CUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As with drugs, it sounds like most of the problems around organ trading are associated with its illegality. If it were legalised, they would go away. And unlike legalising drugs, it would actually save a lot of lives.

    7. Re:I want my CUT! by nbritton · · Score: 1

      If I don't get a cut, my family damn well should! As it exists today my family would be left with an obscene bill, meanwhile the hospital rakes in a couple million.

      Donald Trump estimated the value of a human body to be around $23 million Your family should be able to benefit from your death, at the very least the hospital should cover all funeral expenses. I think it comes down to a legal technicality through. A dead person can't consent to the sale of their body and once they are dead no one has ownership of their body to negotiate the sale of the dead persons bodily resources. You would need some kind of modified durable power of attorney in place, prior to death, that transfers ownership of your body to another person who can then sell your bodily resources to the highest bidder. Instead of eBay Motors, you would have eBay Bodies to sell your loved one. :-/

    8. Re:I want my CUT! by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Certainly in a technological society with increasing disparity between the rich class and the poor class ... We could ALL revoke our donor status cards, which would then REQUIRE the rich to pay extra for our organs. Seeing as more people are poor than our rich, this could be a good way for the 99% to get some of the 1%'s money back. You want our organs? Pay us in advance. I got $130K left on my house's mortgage. Pay that off and you can have me & my wife's organs.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    9. Re:I want my CUT! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      I like where you're going with this. Only the rich benefit from organ donorship... well, with only a few exceptions anyway. (They always seem to pull up some charity case child somewhere for when they try to persuade the public to do more organ donorship.) Someone needs to submit this idea to the list of agenda items in the occupy movement. We know who is benefitting from organ donorship and it isn't the 99%.

    10. Re:I want my CUT! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      ...not withstanding accidents of any variety.

      That and the occasional "time to collect more organs by staging an accident or terrorist attack" drive.

    11. Re:I want my CUT! by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      There are so many different occupy movements. How would we do this? ;)

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    12. Re:I want my CUT! by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      A dead person can't consent to the sale of their body and once they are dead no one has ownership of their body to negotiate the sale of the dead persons bodily resources.

      That's what the concept of an "estate" is for. There is no practical reason why your body can't become part of your estate, just like all your other former possessions.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    13. Re:I want my CUT! by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Not just funeral expenses but end of life expenses. From Mayo Clinic:

      Myth: My family will be charged if I donate my organs.
      Fact: The organ donor's family is never charged for donating. The family is charged for the cost of all final efforts to save your life, and those costs are sometimes misinterpreted as costs related to organ donation. Costs for organ removal go to the transplant recipient.

      Hey your dad died, but good news, we took all his organs and pumped them into this $20 billion/year industry, and we aren't giving you anything. Oh, except we're giving you this bill for our blatant failure to save him.

    14. Re:I want my CUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what the concept of an "estate" is for. There is no practical reason why your body can't become part of your estate, just like all your other former possessions.

      I ran my dad's estate and tried to sell his body. Nobody wanted it.

      Sorta, he wanted it donated, but they said he was too heavy.

    15. Re:I want my CUT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only there was a way to restrict who your organs could be donated to:
      eg.
      Children
      Adults that have been registered as a donor for last X years

  36. What is the value of a human life? by SlithyMagister · · Score: 1

    That is the question underlying the entire discussion.
    I have a so-called "living will" that sets standards for when I should not be resuscitated.
    I don't really care if a miracle cure comes along later.
    When I'm done with my body, I'm happy that someone else can get some use out of whatever parts remain usable.

    "Value of a human life" is more than just a "life or death" question. The quality of life is of concern in this issue as well.

  37. "He's not QUITE Dead.." by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 4, Funny

    "He's feeling much better."

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
    1. Re:"He's not QUITE Dead.." by Kleen13 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, me dusting cobwebs here... Is that Python? Two coconuts?

      --
      That sinking feeling deep in your gut when you KNOW you screwed up bad summed up with: {head desk} {head desk}
    2. Re:"He's not QUITE Dead.." by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      Yes. Lancelot at the wedding. Father of the bride...

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    3. Re:"He's not QUITE Dead.." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He's feeling much better."

      No you're not, you'll be stone dead in a moment.

    4. Re:"He's not QUITE Dead.." by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      "In the year 2013 reality triumphed over every form of political ideology. It did the same in every other year"
      --oelewapperke

  38. Well.. by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

    I want to be able to (1) be an organ donor (2) who the hospital doesn't know is an organ donor until AFTER they decide they can't save me, and even then maybe it's another hospital that knows instead, and (3) only let my organs go to people who aren't assholes. Well, not the wrong kind of assholes, anyway. They can be quite rude, but they can't be mean.

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
  39. Informed Consent? by willaien · · Score: 1

    Exactly how can you have informed consent when you're brain dead?

    Sounds like they're complaining that brain dead is brain dead.

    1. Re:Informed Consent? by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      That phrase did not mean what the author thought it meant.
      He said:

      You're also giving up your right to informed consent. Doctors don't have to tell you or your relatives what they will do to your body during an organ harvest operation because you'll be dead, with no legal rights.

      Informed consent has nothing to do with telling anyone how your cadaver is being disposed. In the US, according to wikipedia:

      Informed consent in these jurisdictions requires that significant risks be disclosed, as well as risks which would be of particular importance to that patient. This approach combines an objective (the reasonable patient) and subjective (this particular patient) approach.

      It just means that you're aware of your treatment options, the risks associated with them, and how those risks apply to you. It doesn't go any further than that. I don't understand how an actual news article on the WSJ (as opposed to a blog post) got this one wrong.

  40. Kill this bullshit story, please by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not only does the summary have absolutely nothing to do with "news for nerds," but it reveals an agenda that is probably (if you scratch it deeply enough) based on religious asshattery rather than sound medical, scientific, or ethical principles.

    Case in in point: But here's the weird part. In at least two studies before the 1981 Uniform Determination of Death Act, some 'brain-dead' patients were found to be emitting brain waves, and at least one doctor has reported a case in which a patient with severe head trauma began breathing spontaneously after being declared brain dead.

    You know who else emits brain waves and breathes spontaneously? Pretty much every life form in kingdom Animalia.

    Why did the submitter not choose to reveal his/her actual agenda, rather than duping an editor into publishing this stupidity? Organ donation saves lives... real lives, lives which are distinguished by characteristics beyond the ability to inhale oxygen and exhale CO2.

    1. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While you're right that the OP is probably a religious asshat trying to get his wacky agenda some air time, you can't deny the huge incentive hospitals have to declare someone "brain dead" who maybe is or maybe isn't or is maybe on the cusp, because they make $750K PER ORGAN harvested.

      They have motive and opportunity, which automatically raises a lot of questions.

      I have a DNR, but I also have a DNH (Do Not Harvest). My organs are mine, and I am taking them with me to the grave. It's not because I am a religious asshat like the OP. It is because I don't think humanity deserves to survive, and slicing up one person just to save another worthless human being is not worth the cost or effort.

    2. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know who else emits brain waves and breathes spontaneously? Pretty much every life form in kingdom Animalia.

      And these life forms aren't considered brain dead. I don't see how this is intended to support your argument.

    3. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by crunchygranola · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While you're right that the OP is probably a religious asshat trying to get his wacky agenda some air time, you can't deny the huge incentive hospitals have to declare someone "brain dead" who maybe is or maybe isn't or is maybe on the cusp, because they make $750K PER ORGAN harvested.

      ...

      What nonsense. Organ transplants COST $750,000 to perform because they are difficult, elaborate, high-tech, risky procedures -- it can't be done for $5 grand by Dr. Nick. That money goes to a lot of expenses the hospital doing the transplant has pay for, large amounts of medical supplies, a lot of highly trained human labor, etc. And you realize, I hope, that this is not some profitable side-line a hospital adds on to fatten its bank balance. Transplants requires special certified, highly qualified teams that must pass rigorous certification. Many transplants are done in regional centers that specialize in doing them because it makes the transplants more successful (practice makes perfect) - these centers aren't medical casinos raking in dough.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    4. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      They also aren't considered to have any rights to speak of, compared to humans.

    5. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      Curiously the comment I responded to has disappeared. What can cause a post deletion?

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    6. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I have a DNR, but I also have a DNH (Do Not Harvest). My organs are mine, and I am taking them with me to the grave. It's not because I am a religious asshat like the OP. It is because I don't think humanity deserves to survive, and slicing up one person just to save another worthless human being is not worth the cost or effort.

      Ugh, a VHE nut...your opinions are worthless.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    7. Re:Kill this bullshit story, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That money goes to a lot of expenses the hospital doing the transplant has pay for, large amounts of medical supplies, a lot of highly trained human labor, etc. And you realize, I hope, that this is not some profitable side-line a hospital adds on to fatten its bank balance. Transplants requires special certified, highly qualified teams that must pass rigorous certification."

      Yes, along the way everyone get a cut.

  41. Wrong Checkbox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If on the DMV form you have an exclude checkbox for organ donation, 98% of population will donate their organs by default. So much for human psychology... as a society we are at a stage where we need make some conscious choices if supply is low we need to understand all possible root cause and try to fix them.

    1. Re:Wrong Checkbox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here in Finland the law changed a few years back which made donor cards redundant. Now, if you don't trust your family to make the right choice for you, you need a card explicitly stating your wish to NOT be an organ donor. The objections were few.

      Also, given that the organ business (or health care) doesn't revolve on an individual having an extra 700k lying about, it's not as scary a scenario as it might elsewise/elsewhere be (though I doubt you'll be actively killed for your organs anyway – unless you spend the night at a dodgy motel somewhere in, say, Eastern Europe)..

    2. Re:Wrong Checkbox by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      If on the DMV form you have an exclude checkbox for organ donation, 98% of population will donate their organs by default.

      AKA the Facebook approach :-P

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  42. Who the hell... by sparky81 · · Score: 0

    ...thought this was anything other than bullshit? How did this make the frontpage?

  43. Re:No Organ Doner There by Bieeanda · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'm choosing to read it as the emerge room team spending a lot more money on a potential donor, than they would on someone who isn't. In the case of someone with a major head injury, tissue typing is pragmatic: there's a huge demand for organs, and the chances of a match succeeding are much higher when they're still fresh. You can bet that they're also networking with transport teams, and even just preparing for a potential trip from donor to recipient is expensive. All of that is wasted in the event of a successful resuscitation.

    Meanwhile, if you don't have a card, costs are limited to the effort of bringing you back. In the event of the worst happening, they can keep you on life support and ask your next of kin about harvesting. Sucks for the people on waiting lists, but it's not like they aren't already cooling their heels.

  44. Homosexual Male organ/tissue donation by lemur3 · · Score: 1

    At least in the USA.. It doesnt seem to matter how dead you are if you were a sexually active homosexual male... you cannot donate your "High Risk" tissues.

    Luckily! There are some hospitals that will accept "High Risk" organs from male homosexuals! hooray!!

    but.. where do I put my orientation? on my drivers license? Do I have to tell my family? They didnt ask me at the DMV!! How can I keep my "High Risk" organs away from the unwitting public?!

    Inquiring minds want to know.

    1. Re:Homosexual Male organ/tissue donation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, why would I want a male organ transplant from a homosexual -- if I won't be able to get it up for chicks, and have awkward erections when I'm with the guys, seems I would be much better off with a prosthetic.

  45. Never trusted by jroysdon · · Score: 1

    I never trusted that a doctor would make the right call.

    Before I was married, I kept a donor card with my ID which said, "Ask my mom," and listed her number.
    Once I got married, I updated my donor card to say, "Ask my wife" and listed her number (unless we're both unable to ask, in which case we both have our own mother's listed).

    Both know my wishes, and both will see that they are carried out.

  46. Never!! by Indigo · · Score: 5, Funny

    They can have my organs when they pry them from my cold, dead... oh wait.

  47. No Worries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ObamaCare will take care of that little problem for you.

  48. When are you dead? by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 4, Funny

    DUH! When Netcraft confirms it.

    1. Re:When Are you Dead? by s_p_oneil · · Score: 1

      I don't know. I think there's a difference between being dead and having no social life. If nothing else, one probably involves less pain and frustration. ;-)

  49. when you can no longer post on /. by ThorGod · · Score: 1

    You're dead, obviously.

    --
    PS: I don't reply to ACs.
    1. Re:when you can no longer post on /. by Existential+Wombat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You sure? there seem to be a few brain dead posters still around...

  50. Information-theoretic death by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your are only truly dead when all the information stored in your brain is destroyed.

  51. $2 million per body's worth. by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    How about... 10% (or some number you negotiate prior to death) of the gross proceeds can be assigned to whatever beneficiaries you have specified.

    It seems kind of shady to complain about a shortage of something when you not only have price controls on it, but the price you control it at is zero.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    1. Re:$2 million per body's worth. by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      So, $1.05? Its not as if organ transplants net $750K in profit, you know. Just because something is expensive doesn't mean that its lucrative.

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
  52. Bewarned those who arent Organ Donors... by GarretSidzaka · · Score: 2

    I read several comments talking about removing their organ donor status. I have done the same several years ago, when i first heard about the illegal organ trade, killing people in comas and such.

    However, I have heard that even if your card specifically reads NOT ORGAN DONOR, they will still harvest your organs, right there in the hospital. They might accidentally not read your license or overlook checking your records "in the haste to preserve organ freshness"

    Beware the hospitals and their organ business, and here's to hoping that they honor our Drivers Licenses, but how are you supposed to defend against evisceration by a "Doctor" while you are in a deep, head trauma coma? without anesthetic..... sounds like horror movie material

    1. Re:Bewarned those who arent Organ Donors... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [citation needed]

    2. Re:Bewarned those who arent Organ Donors... by aXis100 · · Score: 0

      It's terrible isn't it. Those nastry surgeons trying to save 3 other recipient's lives, how evil!

    3. Re:Bewarned those who arent Organ Donors... by GarretSidzaka · · Score: 1

      and if you want to know, i dont want to support that socioeconomic class with my organs. by that i mean the rich ppl who inevitably get the majority of these organs. I really actually dont want to help them at all. And yes i think that some doctors are corrupt, and that the donor process has been commercialized.

  53. Re:No Organ Doner There by NormalVisual · · Score: 1

    Either profit belongs in "the system" or it doesn't.

    Let's assume profit *does* belong in the system. Where does the donor's estate factor into this? It (and by extension, the surviving family) doesn't see a dime for these organs that are worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to "the system".

    --
    Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
  54. How dead? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

    Ask Spock, Ellen Ripley, or (my favorite) Aeryn Sun. They've been dead at least a few times.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:How dead? by Xaide · · Score: 1

      Don't bother asking Spock. He'll just tell you the same thing he told McCoy.

      --
      No fair! You changed the outcome by measuring it!
    2. Re:How dead? by s_p_oneil · · Score: 1

      You forgot the Dread Pirate Roberts, who was only "mostly dead". And of course, Buffy, who died a number of times.

    3. Re:How dead? by alexo · · Score: 1

      Buffy as well.

  55. I'm not stupid to check donor on my license by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't remember how long it was, but I'm sure I checked no to be a donor. It didn't take me long to understand that something like this can be abused. It is a billion dollar industry. Maybe if America had universal health care, I'd feel bad not checking it off but I don't. If I happen to be in my death bed, and I need life support then don't f*cking pull the plug. I wanna know that I have the chance to come back, rather then be spare parts for someone else.

  56. You're dead when your credit score is 0 by kungfool · · Score: 1

    I would think the appropriate way to determine how dead you are is measure your brain activity and multiply by your credit score then add your net worth. When that reaches zero, congratulations, you've become a productive member of society and the six rich folks getting your organs thank you.

  57. Best joke... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -- First, let's make sure he's dead.
    -- Hmm, okay!

  58. Grow up by retroworks · · Score: 1

    So if I am an organ donor, and I have a head trauma, what exactly is the X% chance that I'm "harvested" when I would have revived? What is the Y% that I would have died anyway? And what is the Z% that I'm revived to a really crappy bed-ridden semi-veggie burden on society life? For me in the "worst case" where I may have recovered, I still gave my life for someone else. That's what soldiers and firefighters do.

    No one lives forever. Grow up, people.

    --
    Gently reply
    1. Re:Grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, soldiers sell their bodies for money, and firefighters do it for honor. You will be selling your body for someone else to make some money, for a third party to *maybe* extend their life a little while, or not depending on the procedure or the need.

      If you really believe others are better than yourself, you might as well off yourself and give 3.3 people fighting chances.

    2. Re:Grow up by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      No one lives forever.

      Including organ recipients

  59. The civilized thing to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The organ donor card should be multiple choice:

    A. I don't want to donate my organs

    B. I want to donate my organs but only if I'm 100% brain-dead

    C. I want to donate my organs, consider me dead if I'm 80% brain-dead

    1. Re:The civilized thing to do by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > I want to donate my organs, consider me dead if I'm 80% brain-dead

      What does that even mean? 80% brain-dead? If only 20% of your brain is still functional you're no less dead than compared to 0% functional. Try randomly destroying 4 out of every 5 transistors on your CPU and see how it runs.

  60. $2mil per corpse by WinstonWolfIT · · Score: 2

    If I'm worth that much dead, there should be a market for selling organ rights, where what's successfully harvested yields a payment to my estate. That in turn would make the organ market more liquid and efficient, and bring down the cost of organs.

    1. Re:$2mil per corpse by Existential+Wombat · · Score: 1

      Right, if I knew my family would benefit financially, as well as some stranger for my death I'd feel better about being a donor. I'm still a donor though. It feels the right thing to do.

  61. Not dead yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He says he's not dead yet.

  62. comprise, not compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Earning points towards my annual pedant requalification: )

    The difference between comprise and compromise is more than just two letters :) The person writing the summary needs to be a little more careful.

    1. Re:comprise, not compromise by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      They have started comprising on the spellcheck.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
  63. How dead do you want patients to be before you st by ancient_kings · · Score: 1

    "How dead do you want patients to be before you start taking their organs?' The answer, "Poor enough dead".

  64. Show me the money by ukemike · · Score: 2

    a $20 billion per year business, with average recipients charged $750,000 for a transplant

    Seriously, if this is such a big business, I want to be paid for my organs. Why should some medical institution or insurance company profit from my flesh? Obviously I won't be around to enjoy it, but I hope my son will. I would be very happy to know that my heart, liver, kidneys, eyes, etc. provided funding for his college education. I can't figure out any other way I'm going to be able to put him through school. Hell the state universities cost more than the private ones did in the late '80's.

    --
    -- QED
  65. Wife and I revoked organ donation by HangingChad · · Score: 1

    The wife and I both revoked our organ donor authorizations on our drivers license. While the other one can sign the consent, our personal rules are far more strict than the guidelines the hospital has to follow for organ donors.

    When I was a firefighter there were too many times bodies were being prepped for organ donation before parents had even signed the consent forms. We both revoked our organ donation authorizations.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  66. the 'real' problem with organ donation... by mevets · · Score: 2

    Is drinking and driving laws. During the period where drinking and driving was the norm, and seatbelt/helmet use was almost unheard of, there was no lack of young, healthy donor organs.
    Social pressure has wreaked havoc on this, and created a new, younger class of unemployed.
    The answer is simple - re-enable driving around shit-faced and MDs will be swimming in spare kidneys and other bits; and we can resume full employment.

    1. Re:the 'real' problem with organ donation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All well and good if all they killed were themselves. So, get rid of motorcycle helmet laws.

      But drunk driving kills a lot more people than just the drunk driver. They are probably alone; the car they run into has a good chance of having multiple innocent people in it.

    2. Re:the 'real' problem with organ donation... by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      I would be all for this - if the drunk people were the ones getting killed. Unfortunately they have an annoying tendency to kill OTHER people and survive themselves - alcohol increases your chance of surviving a crash.

      In fact, in the worst possible case, you can be drunk, crash into someone else, kill them, survive yourself, then get their organs transplanted into you to keep you alive.

      Doesn't pass the smell test.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
  67. When am I dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now. No wait, not yet. Now.

    No, wait... my heart beat again, and it seems I may be exhibiting signs of brain function, despite my reading /.

    So... now. No, wait... (damned intermittent signs of life...). Now. Definitely.

    Ah crap... not yet, I guess.

  68. The record is at least 31 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A quick google search shows that you are wrong: The record was (at least a couple of years back) 31 years: http://www.physorg.com/news169234417.html

  69. Re:No Organ Doner There by sjames · · Score: 1

    Apparently she did mind. She tried it for a rotation and apparently chose to do something else after.

  70. Smart enough for politics ? by trdrstv · · Score: 1

    If my brain damage is severe enough that I can't at least hold a public office, then it's best to just let me go.

  71. How is it not informed consent? by muridae · · Score: 1

    I made the decision to mark the donation card or not. I took as much time as I wanted to inform myself, more time than I would have had to think than if the paramedics asked me. Sure, I may not understand all the intricacies, so what? I made my informed decision.

    Then got told by the state "thanks, but no."

    1. Re:How is it not informed consent? by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Informed consent is not relevant - the article screwed it up. Informed consent is about treatment, not about how your corpse is disposed of once you are no longer treatable.

  72. NEVER GOING TO BE AN ORGAN DONOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the split second world of the E.R. I dont ever want to be worth 5-10x as much dead as I am alive, suspose I am transported to a failing hospital, do I want the doctors wondering how many more lives they could save with the money they could make from organs.

    In the split second world of life or death, do I want a doctor thinking he could do more good, and save 4 lives with my organs (AND POCKET A TON OF MONEY FOR HIS EMPLOYERS) instead of the 1 life in front of him.

    No No No. You must click your heels 3 times and state that an economic decision will never influence a doctor, as they aren't human beings they are super awesome. Yeah whatever.

    Here's what would make this never going to donate individual an organ donor in a heart beat. All organ based proceeds from my body go to my next of kin, and put my kids through college, not the hospital owners kids through college.

    Remove the economic incentive for the hospital to let me die, and save 4 more lives (and make 10x as much), and I will be happy to donate my organs, save lives, and secure a future for my children instead of the hospital shareholders children.

  73. Can we have your liver? by skribe · · Score: 2
    --
    Blog
  74. Organlegging by greg1104 · · Score: 1

    Larry Niven's short story The Jigsaw Man extrapolated an organ donation slippery slope back in 1967, introducing the term "organlegging" to the world. The main story follows someone convicted for death and subsequent disassembly as they try to escape that fate. Interleaved with it is a future history of increasingly minor crimes that result in a death/donation sentence, as society's ability to use and therefore demand for organ transplants grows. The twist at the end involves how minor the convict's offense was, relative to current laws.

    1. Re:Organlegging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh, you mean china?

    2. Re:Organlegging by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      Larry Niven's short story The Jigsaw Man extrapolated an organ donation slippery slope back in 1967, introducing the term "organlegging" to the world. The main story follows someone convicted for death and subsequent disassembly as they try to escape that fate. Interleaved with it is a future history of increasingly minor crimes that result in a death/donation sentence, as society's ability to use and therefore demand for organ transplants grows. The twist at the end involves how minor the convict's offense was, relative to current laws.

      And it is notable how completely unprescient it proved to be. Nearly half a century later there is no sign of a trend in the direction he postulated.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    3. Re:Organlegging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except in China.

    4. Re:Organlegging by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Really? Sounds like China is headed down that path today with their prisoner organ harvesting.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  75. Chicago by cashman73 · · Score: 1

    In Chicago, one often isn't removed from the voter registration lists until several years after the actual date of death, so they're still eligible to vote.

  76. Death is a prognosis, not a state. by SecurityGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's the best explanation I've ever heard. "Dead" is simply the expectation that you're never going to be what we call "alive" again. Sometimes we're more certain than others. Run over by a steamroller? Yeah, we're pretty certain you're dead. Brain dead? We're pretty certain you're dead, just ever so slightly less so. Heart stopped? Ok, you're not dead, but you're definitely in danger of it if we don't get it started Very Soon Now.

  77. Re:I have an organ donor card...http://science.sla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have have locked-in syndrome then kill me.
    More than 24 hours of that sounds like the worst hell imaginable.

  78. That is why don't be a donor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too many Indians practice medicine in the USA and they will just kill you intentionally to sell your organs for cash.

  79. NEVER SIGN AN ORGAN DONOR CARD by Dainsanefh · · Score: 0

    People who should have been alive have been killed by their doctors to sell their organs for cash.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uv6pI0dq86Q&feature=player_embedded

    --
    Twitter: @dainsanefh
  80. My Problem With This by assertation · · Score: 2

    I have an organ donor card.

    Under our ( U.S. ) current ( lack of ) healthcare system, if I got cancer or something similar, it could ruin me financially. My bank account would get emptied out and I would lose everything.

    Yet, someone could charging 2 million dollars for my organs if I died of a head trauma. I doubt all of that would be hospital costs and none of it would be going to my family or friends.

    Why the hell should I donate my organs to a system, for free, when they will profit like crazy from it, but if I am living with a severe disease that same system will bankrupt my ass?

    1. Re:My Problem With This by jpapon · · Score: 1
      I agree completely, but remember, you donate your organs to save someone's life. The fact that *someone* makes a huge profit off of it is merely a byproduct, and doesn't change the fact that your organs will save someone.

      But as I said, I agree that health care costs are out of control, and the fact that most health-care in the US is for-profit business is just sad. Medical services should be about saving lives, NOT making money. They cannot, on a fundamental level, be both.

      --
      -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
    2. Re:My Problem With This by Lando · · Score: 1

      Well, if it makes you feel any better, since you're dead you don't have to pay the bills. They guy/gal that gets your organs will be put through the ringer though.

      --
      /* TODO: Spawn child process, interest child in technology, have child write a new sig */
    3. Re:My Problem With This by jlehtira · · Score: 1

      That was my problem with this too. Pretty much the only one I have. I don't mind doctors charging from their work, but I greatly object anyone making money from my organs, just because there's scarcity on the "market" and they can.

  81. When are you dead? by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

    Well it's before Ken tells you "You are already dead."

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
  82. Same rules as abortion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Throughout most of western society, a fetus is considered a person as it enters the third trimester, where it can presumably survive on its own if removed from the womb, at which point abortion becomes illegal. Similarly, a person should be considered dead when consciousness cannot be restored and they can no longer survive without mechanical life support of a type that is not portable. No brainer - pardon the pun.

  83. I've been telling people this for 20 years. by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    The sheeple aren't going to listen. I'm in favor of organ donation, but I'll trust my relatives to make the decision when the time comes. I'm not advertising to anyone that my organs can be harvested to make them money.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    1. Re:I've been telling people this for 20 years. by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      Never would I want to force them to take the descision when they are mournig. It'll be a difficult time as it is and I would not want to force them into taking a descision I could have taken myself.
      Alternately: They'll be to drunk to make a discision from the party they'll be having (me finally gone and all that). They always make the wrong discisions when they're drunk and they just might decide they'd need my organs as living room decorations.
      I am a donor because I do not wish to force that disicion on them at that time.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    2. Re:I've been telling people this for 20 years. by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      If you verbally tell the person that the medical people will ask, they'll just be carrying out your wishes. It won't be making a decision in that case.

      My inability to trust people keeps me from putting it on my driver's license.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  84. Of course they will get you before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are dead if they can make a buck.
    Dead people are normally worthless.

  85. Kidney transplants are counterexample by EdwinFreed · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Back when dialysis was first perfected, the machines were extremely expensive and only rich people could afford to be treated. And since that's effectively a death sentence to the very large numbers of people in end stage renal disease (ESRD), there was a huge fuss. In the end, Medicare was extended to cover the cost of treatment for anyone with ESRD. No age restrictions, nothing.

    When kidney transplants became feasible they were also covered. So the notion that you have to be rich or have excellent insurance to get a transplant is just plain wrong.

    This is not to say that the system isn't borked, but that happens long after the transplant. Specifically, once you have a undergone a successful transplant you no longer have ESRD, so Medicare coverage stops. But your need for anti-rejection medication does not, and it's expensive. That's a separate thing, and the guidelines for it were set back when transplants rarely lasted for more than a few years. So the rules say that Medicare pays for the medication for 36 months, then coverage ends.

    As a result a not-insignificant number of people with transplanted kidneys are forced to stop taking the necessary medication because they cannot afford it. Their transplants fail, and once that happens they're back in ESRD and on dialysis. And their Medicare coverage resumes. Oh, and did I mention that the medications are expensive, they're still significantly cheaper than dialysis? So this is truly a case of penny-wise, pound-foolish.

    One final note. The coverage issue was addressed by the health care reform bill, but that particular provision doesn't kick in until 2014.

    1. Re:Kidney transplants are counterexample by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      It is very strange. I had a friend with childhood renal failure who had at least a hundred million dollars spent on him over the course of his life. I have had other friends die prematurely or live with pain or disability due to inability to afford care. It is such an odd imbalance in resource allocation. It seems like it would make more sense to spend all that money on people that are likely to live a normal life, but for the reasons you mention anyone with renal failure is given bottomless health care.

      I am personally grateful that he was helped so much, but looking at it objectively it doesn't make sense to me.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    2. Re:Kidney transplants are counterexample by EdwinFreed · · Score: 1

      This stuff is incredibly expensive, but a $100 million seems excessive. As it happens I also know someone who had total renal failure when he was a kid - a bad blood transfusion not only nuked his kidneys, he also developed an inflammatory process that required his existing kidneys to be completely removed, and subsequently, when a transplant failed it also had to be removed. (Believe it or not, the norm is to leave them in. Some people end up with four or more kidneys in there.) It's been 30 years since that happened, and he's now on his fourth transplant.

      Using the guy I know as an example, let's add up the costs. Let's assume he's been on dialysis 1/2 the time, at $50K/year. Let's assume he's had a working transplant 1/2 the time, at $20K a year for the meds (that's probably a little high, but this is all just spitballing). Transplant surgery runs around $150K, but in his case the removal of the kidney is more complicated and may involve additional hospitalization, so let's call it $250K. Let's also assume there were five rejection episodes per kidney requiring hospitalization, at $50K a pop. And finally, let's add $20K a year for miscellaneous ancillary medical costs - there are *lot* of those.

      Add that up and he's around $4 million. That's a lot of money, but nowhere near $100 million. There has to be some other factor, like long ICU stays or much more expensive meds, to get anywhere near that sort of number.

  86. Headless humans still run around too... by tobiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

    During the French Revolution, betting on how far a headless noble would get was a popular gambler's game.

    --
    "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
    1. Re:Headless humans still run around too... by Hognoxious · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'd guess the most profitable bet would be "not very far at all" given that they were executed in a prone position and the balance organs end up in a different part to the propulsion units.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:Headless humans still run around too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      During the French Revolution, betting on how far a headless noble would get was a popular gambler's game.

      Citation needed?

    3. Re:Headless humans still run around too... by stillnotelf · · Score: 2

      No, no, you bet on how far the head would roll!

    4. Re:Headless humans still run around too... by OhSoLaMeow · · Score: 1

      So that's where the expression "I'm on a roll!" came from!

      --
      They can take my LifeAlert pendant when they pry it from my cold dead fingers.
    5. Re:Headless humans still run around too... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      A headless noble != a head. Comprehension (and set theory) fail.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  87. FREEDOM! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you can't make that choice for others. you can talk and influence, but when it come down to it THEY have to decide.

    forcing someone to give up their organs is just as, if not more, despicable as trying to force celibacy on someone by denying them access to contraceptives. people have to be free to make their own choices.

    1. Re:FREEDOM! by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > forcing someone to give up their organs is just as, if not more, despicable as trying to force celibacy on someone by denying them access to contraceptives. people have to be free to make their own choices.

      Except this entire conversation is in the context of *donors*, who by definition have given their consent, so it doesn't make any sense to accuse me of forcing people.

  88. Open Source Organ Donation by codepunk · · Score: 1

    I only relinquish my organs on the condition that the transferee will not be charged a total cost of not more than 20k to include all costs and services.

    I like it, open source organ donation.

    --


    Got Code?
  89. Shouldn't the donor ('s family) get the proceeds? by jpapon · · Score: 1
    Who exactly is getting all this money for these organs?

    I can't believe that it really costs $750,000 to harvest someone's liver and put it in someone else. Medical costs are so inflated in the US, it's absolutely ridiculous... You're telling me it costs the same amount to transplant a liver as it costs to produce 35-40 mid-range (~$20,000) cars??

    --
    -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
  90. DMV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had a discussion at the DMV about this. I was trying to explain to them that you can
    be harvested before you have actually died; they were telling people otherwise. Choosing
    to be a doner is a very dangerous thing, especially with on-line medical records. It's like
    asking for a head injury. You become too easy a match for someone "important". It's happened
    before with the Gov. of PA. It could happen to anyone who might be a potential match...

  91. I don't have an organ donor card by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I find it most offensive that you somehow find it "moral" to claim a right on my organs. Let's see if you reciprocate : can I cut out your heart ? You claim a right on mine, so why can't I have yours ?

    How about younger children where killing an older person might save them (killing = the older person doesn't agree) ? What about a rich person needing a heart and a poor person "not having a liveable life anyway ?". What about a politically desirable individual needing one ?

    I would not be able to live with a "donated" organ that was taken under the conditions you seem to think give you a right to kill other people.

    1. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      I find it most offensive that you somehow find it "moral" to claim a right on my organs. Let's see if you reciprocate : can I cut out your heart ? You claim a right on mine, so why can't I have yours ?

      I am a registered organ donor, so the answer is "yes, you can cut out my heart". If I am brain dead, obviously. And even if I am not quite brain dead but could only ever be brought back to some kind of zombie state and kept in an institution somewhere, unable to communicate or think clearly. But that's just me.

      How about younger children where killing an older person might save them (killing = the older person doesn't agree) ? What about a rich person needing a heart and a poor person "not having a liveable life anyway ?". What about a politically desirable individual needing one ?

      Only those people who cannot be brought back to a fully conscious life. That, to me, seems to be a safe and conservative boundary. The life is lost anyway. And if a qualified doctor determines that that is indeed the case, that's good enough for me. Keeping someone alive on the off-chance that some miracle might happen that might allow the person to raise an eyebrow and nothing else, while other people are dying for lack of organs, doesn't make sense to me.

      I would not be able to live with a "donated" organ that was taken under the conditions you seem to think give you a right to kill other people.

      By all means, then, carry a document that stipulates that you do not want to receive organs. The other people on the waiting list will be very grateful. Would you carry such a document? If you were terminally ill and could only be saved with an organ from the victim of a traffic accident, would you refuse? If not, then stop being a hypocrite.

    2. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it most offensive that you somehow find it "moral" to claim a right on my organs.

      Not yours, you idiot. We're talking about organs from consenting donors, not irrational morons.

    3. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Only those people who cannot be brought back to a fully conscious life. That, to me, seems to be a safe and conservative boundary. The life is lost anyway.

      The same can be said about the old guy, the poor guy and about political undesirables. Hell, the same is said about young children with a mild mental handicap. (and that's not the only paper advocating such a viewpoint)

      The other people on the waiting list will be very grateful.

      This sentence mostly shows just how little you know about transplantation. The problem is not the amount of organs, but whether a donor can be found with a compatible immune system. For any given recipient, it is extremely rare that there is more than 1 good donor, likewise most available organs are never used for anything. This would be true even if everybody donated organs.

      It is frightening how strong an opinion people can have when being ill-informed to such a degree.

      So no, nobody on the list will be grateful in the least. If there is an organ that would match me, chances that it will match someone else needing an organ are tiny. So nobody will be grateful.

      If you were terminally ill and could only be saved with an organ from the victim of a traffic accident, would you refuse? If not, then stop being a hypocrite.

      Oh great, hyperbole. If you were terminally ill and could get better if you just had the doctors kill some unknown homeless person, would you ? Some mentally retarded kid ? Some usually comatose old guy ? A black woman perhaps ? An infidel ? A republican ? A communist ? There's plenty of people who argue those lives to be less than worthwhile. "If not, then stop discussing."

      And for the record, if I was not sure about the circumstances in which said organ was taken, yes, I would refuse. For one thing, why would my life be worth more to the doctor than that of the guy they cut open for the organ in question ?

    4. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      The other people on the waiting list will be very grateful.

      This sentence mostly shows just how little you know about transplantation. The problem is not the amount of organs, but whether a donor can be found with a compatible immune system. For any given recipient, it is extremely rare that there is more than 1 good donor, likewise most available organs are never used for anything. This would be true even if everybody donated organs.

      It is frightening how strong an opinion people can have when being ill-informed to such a degree.

      So no, nobody on the list will be grateful in the least. If there is an organ that would match me, chances that it will match someone else needing an organ are tiny. So nobody will be grateful.

      Explain the existence of (numbered) waiting lists, then. For example, Steve Jobs was told that there were so many people ahead of him on the list that that he probably would not make it (he obviously couldn't just skip ahead to the top of the list because he was Steve Jobs). He ended up getting a transplant a bit sooner by putting his name on a list of another state with less people on it, and there was a bit of controvercy about whether or not that was dishonest. Such a controversy wouldn't make sense if eligibility only depended on compatibility. Sure, you don't actually have to be number one of the list, the organ goes to the highest ranking compatible recipient. Which may be number two or three, or maybe even twenty, but probably not number 100.

      It's frightening how strongly some people will tell people off for supposedly being ignorant while being wrong themselves.

      Oh great, hyperbole. If you were terminally ill and could get better if you just had the doctors kill some unknown homeless person, would you ? Some mentally retarded kid ? Some usually comatose old guy ? A black woman perhaps ? An infidel ? A republican ? A communist ? There's plenty of people who argue those lives to be less than worthwhile.

      No, only people whose life has effectively ended. As in, brain dead, extremely unlikely to come alive again, and even in that very rare and unexpected case, "alive without actual human functionality, like a vegetable. In other words, a one in maybe ten thousand chance of being a vegetable, and "really" dead (but too dead to harvest organs) in all other cases. Obviously I would not want to take an organ from some healthy homeless person.

      And for the record, if I was not sure about the circumstances in which said organ was taken, yes, I would refuse. For one thing, why would my life be worth more to the doctor than that of the guy they cut open for the organ in question ?

      And what kind of proof would you need? Could you ever be certain? If not, better carry that document stating "does not accept donated organs"...

    5. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by mynicknamewasused · · Score: 0

      "Let's see if you reciprocate : can I cut out your heart ?"

      If you need it to survive, and iÂm brain dead, go ahead.

    6. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Explain the existence of (numbered) waiting lists, then.

      In order to buy you more time, they will implant organs doctors know will get rejected in a matter of weeks or months. Half of the time this kills the patient, which beats 100% with the old organ. It doesn't really help, except in the very short term, because few people are implanted twice. That means a large majority people who get a "temp" organ die in less than 1 year.

      Truly sorry about your idol, but Steve Jobs wasn't exactly a role model for moral behavior. Given the amount of time he survived he has gotten lucky and survived a little over 5 years with a foreign organ. That must have been one of those perfect matches that did not require him to be on the waiting list though, as surviving 5 years on the first available organ is unheard of.

      No, only people whose life has effectively ended. As in, brain dead, extremely unlikely to come alive again, and even in that very rare and unexpected case, "alive without actual human functionality, like a vegetable. In other words, a one in maybe ten thousand chance of being a vegetable, and "really" dead (but too dead to harvest organs) in all other cases. Obviously I would not want to take an organ from some healthy homeless person.

      That seems like a very vague standard. Words like "effectively", "unlikely" and "unexpected" do not belong in a definition as important as that one. Worse, "effectively ended" applies to a lot of people, and it's not that big of a stretch to claim that about, say, a homeless person (e.g. one in alaska that's "very unlikely" to last the night outside). But you could make the same point about all those people mentioned.

      Steve Jobs was one of those people who clamoured for moving this definition when he needed an organ. That pressure will continue.

      You know what's funny ? Slashdot is showing me this quote today :

      Youth is such a wonderful thing. What a crime to waste it on children. -- George Bernard Shaw

      I wonder if he would apply this argument to organ donation.

      And for the record, if I was not sure about the circumstances in which said organ was taken, yes, I would refuse. For one thing, why would my life be worth more to the doctor than that of the guy they cut open for the organ in question ?

      And what kind of proof would you need? Could you ever be certain? If not, better carry that document stating "does not accept donated organs"...

      Oh right, so not having absolute certainty is a problem, is it ? Then how do you know you're not getting an organ from a person with "locked in syndrome" ? Presuming of course, you would find that a problem.

      BTW: read the rest of the thread, as there's a story of a person who got extremely close to getting declared medically dead and, while half his brain tissue made no recovery at all, the person did make a full functional recovery. Had that person signed a donor card, what would have happened ? I think that case would be pretty certain, no ?

    7. Re:I don't have an organ donor card by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      I find it most offensive that you somehow find it "moral" to claim a right on my organs.

      Once "you" no longer exist -- i.e., your forebrain, seat of thought and personality and emotion and all functions higher than a twitch is no longer functioning -- it is inappropriate to refer to anything as "yours".

      Now, there may be a legitimate issue here about when "you" cease to exist in some edge cases. That's certainly worth discussing, and I'd like everyone to be very, very sure that I'm gone before they start dividing up the ol' corpus.

      But given that you are no longer around, the chunk of meat that used to do the verb-that-was-you is a potentially life-saving resource. Sentimental attachments and slippery-slope arguments aside, it is only rational to put the resource to good use.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  92. good Samaritan organ doners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is most interesting to me is the come on: 'If you donate your organs you could save a life', so we should become organ doners...right? But then after you are dead, and your organs are harvested, they are sold for an average of $2,000,000.00 per body? You are the good Samaritan and someone else gets rich off your good nature? Duhhhh...this is a no brainer. Why aren't we offered deals like...'Take care of your body and we will pay for your organs.' I mean, I have already agreed to be an organ doner...after I'm dead, but a couple hundred thousand dollars would sure help get me through my living years.

  93. When Are you Dead? by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

    When are you dead?

    - easy, the moment you take your first IT job.

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
  94. sedative? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    probably no need for analgesic but if you're just pushing pavulon to keep them from squirming I don't know if I'd call that "anesthesia"...

    1. Re:sedative? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      No, we actually gave them isoflurane. Like I said, it's to quiet the spinal cord.

  95. Simple check by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

    You are dead enough if you like Justin Bieber's music/Twilight/"Keeping up with the Kardashians".

    --
    Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
  96. Private healthcare by Dominic · · Score: 2

    This is one of the many reasons why any private healthcare model is broken. As soon as there are financial incentives for anything the care of patients, both donors and recipients, is secondary.

    I give blood and have a donor card. I do this willingly knowing that I am helping society. If my donated blood or organ was the source of profit for some company, would I donate? I don't know, but I can't see why some company should make a profit out of something I donated.

    Private healthcare is a scourge. Nobody should be made bankrupt by illness, or even have to worry about it (financially). In the UK our NHS provides whatever you need, regardless of means - it's just a shame that the current government is in the process of destroying it as a reward to private healthcare companies who funded them at the last election.

    1. Re:Private healthcare by BCoates · · Score: 1

      So solution is to have healthcare run by the government that is owned by private healthcare companies?

    2. Re:Private healthcare by Dominic · · Score: 1

      No, that's not what I'm saying at all. The private companies shouldn't own any of it, just as here in the UK (although that is rapidly changing).

      The UK's NHS is consistently shown to be one of, if not 'the', most efficient healthcare system in the world, and yet it's (currently) the one with the lowest level of private sector involvement among the developed nations. There is no evidence at all that private companies make things more efficient - in fact the evidence points the opposite way.

  97. Effective Use by UnresolvedExternal · · Score: 1

    I have a donor card but I intentionally do not fill it in - I would like someone else to have the use of it after I die

  98. When the reproductive organs stop functioning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the reproductive organs stop functioning.

  99. When you can no longer be made conscious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I think you're right, with one small change: You are dead when you can never again be conscious.

    On a slightly irrelevant topic, it drives me nuts when I see television shows about "I was dead for 10 minutes!" and the like, because after some accident, someone's heart stopped beating for ten minutes, as if when someone's heart fails to beat for ten seconds they're instantly dead.

    Live doesn't work that way. Plants don't die the instant you rip them from the ground. Animals don't die the instant you cut off their heads.

    What's more, it isn't even life that we ultimately care about, but rather, consciousness. If some day we can figure out how to get our consciousness into machines, we'll all be quite happy to be dead, but we'll likely consider ourselves to be immortal at the same time. Similarly, no one gives a shit about killing plants because they were never conscious to begin with.

  100. I'm dead... by LeadSongDog · · Score: 1

    ...when I damn well say so. Pass the brains.

    --
    Oh, I'm sorry sir, I thought you were referring to me, Mr. Wensleydale.
  101. Ah, libertarian thinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if in the case of an accident there is a one-in-a-million chance of a mistake being made costing me my life and a 999,999-in-a-million chance that I can save multiple lives rather than let my body going to waste, I'm supposed to rush to get myself out of the donor list?

    When has the tragedy of the commons become a lofty ideal that we should all pursue?

  102. If you donate are your funeral costs covered? by jnowlan · · Score: 1

    Can anyone comment on this? Seems the least that could be done if your an organ donor.

  103. When are you dead? by Ed_1024 · · Score: 1

    NOT UNTIL I SAY SO

  104. Is brain dead the best criteria? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

    I know such people who lead perfectly normal lives. I've done tech-support for them, and I can confirm that they ARE brain dead.

    --
    Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  105. Bring out your dead... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not dead yet.

    Yes you are!

  106. Medical families by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    writes David Crippen, M.D.

    I wonder if he's related to a more famous Dr Crippen?

  107. How about this? by RobCull · · Score: 1

    I am an organ donor. My biggest fear is the fact that I am an organ donor may discourage some doctors from fighting their hardest to keep me alive. Essentially, the fact that a doctor knows I am an organ donor may encourage the doctor to give up on me too soon with the hopes that my organs may save someone else.

    So here's my proposition: Keep a patients organ donor status hidden from doctors until after they declare me dead. That would at least balance the playing field.

    I would like to see some stats comparing organ donors and non-organ donors- is more "final hour/last ditch effort" treatment given to non-organ donors as opposed to organ donors? Do physicians tend to go to more/less lengths to save an patient if he/she is an organ donor?

  108. Organ Donors by Sasha-Whitefur · · Score: 1

    That is informed consent, nobody goes into that without, thinking about it first.

  109. For what little it's worth, here's my take on this by idontgno · · Score: 1

    Doctors are human. That means they're fallible, both potentially by well-intentioned accident and by ill-intentioned malice. For all of that, they still hold the proverbially power of life or death over their patients, including me. I don't distrust a doctor any less because he may declare me dead before I "really die" than I would because he may accidentally prescribe a medication neither of us knew I was deathly allergic to, or because he may have an under-the-table life insurance policy on me and the settlement on that would make his next couple of Lexus payments.

    I live until I die. After that, if the tissues which once sustained my life can be of use to someone else after I'm done with them, terrific. Leave enough of my lifeless corpse for my family to mourn me in whatever fashion they prefer (I won't care, so whatever is sufficient for them is sufficient) and get the maximum benefit to others that you can.

    --
    Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  110. Clearly you can be pronounced dead.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you pass the bar.

  111. So you are favour harvesting babies organs! by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    the act of creating the new person, and why would you create one new person (who, depending on the severity of the former brain damage, may have no skills and/or memories) when you can harvest some organs and preserve the lives of several already existing people?

    Wow spectacularly sick way of looking at the world. You will go far.

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    Deleted
  112. Brain thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny. a very long time ago the brain was thought to be a "cooling agent" for the blood. I think most politicians still use it that way. Put me on the side of no donation. Medical science and doctors have already taken hundreds of thousands of dollars from me and my insurance for there bank accounts!

  113. Confused? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chickens, not chicks.