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Thursday, March 24, 2011

Confronting the Intrenched Organ Donation System: It is possible

Below are examples of some blogs, websites, and articles which all confront the reality of the current (possibly semi-dysfunctional) organ transplant disbursement system and attempt to shine light on it, study it, and offer ways to improve it. Or, they break with the current system altogether and blaze alternative paths to increase the supply of organs available for transplantation.
I don't attest to the veracity of the claims made in these links. Make your own judgment. But the current system can most assuredly be improved. It will take people and organizations similar to those linked to below who aspire to improve the current system to create the change necessary which will lay the foundation to increase the supply of organs and thereby save lives.

For a live kidney donor recipient's personal outlook on the entrenched interests opposing live-donor donation see this website.

For a blog about alternative methods to increase the supply of organs available for transplantation see here.

For a website that attempts to link live organ donors with people in need of a transplant see this website.

For a press release about a grant awarded to study the outdated organ disbursement method and how it causes unequal access to donated organs based on where a person live see here . Also see here for an old post on the issue where I propose a study designed partly to determine the effect of a person's distance to a transplant center and the time it takes for the person to receive an organ. Yes, its a very technically worded post so don't say I didn't warn you.

And finally, see this link for a book titled, "The U.S.Organ Procurement System" where the authors, David L. Kaserman and A.H. Barnett engage in a thorough economic analysis of current U.S. organ transplant policy, the problems with it, and a proposal explaining how organ markets would operate in a manner which would save lives by increasing the supply of organs available.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Jonas Salk created the Polio Vaccine...Lessons for Kidney Transplantation

"Hope lies in dreams, in imagination and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality."
The preceding statement comes from a memorial at the Salk Institute which captures
Dr. Salk's vision.
Dr. Jonas Salk prevented millions and millions of deaths when he created and engineered the polio vaccine in the 1950's. I am keenly aware of the human suffering he prevented...my grandmother grieved the rest of her life for her 17 year old son, Martin, who died of polio in September, 1954 - while Salk's new vaccine was being tested on one million school children.
Presently, in California, there is the Salk Institute which carries on the legacy of Dr. Salk which researches various phenomenon ranging from cancer, diabetes and birth defects to Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, AIDS and plant biology. See the Salk Institute's description here.

I was thinking about the quote..."Hope lies in dreams, in imagination and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality."
Until their are enough courageous people willing to attempt to find a solution to the current shortage of kidneys available for transplantation, the hope to solve the problem is like a fleeting and illusory dream - and not a very hopeful dream on the cusp of being turned into reality.