I've been diabetic since 13, so they never wanted mine, even when I got old enough. I used to volunteer for the drives, though, and make cookies - best I could do!
This may sound naive, but how can a hospital be designated as a transplant facility without blood bank reserves What if there's an incoming trauma to this facility's ER at the time of transplant ?I don't understand this.......
By the medical definition of an 'organ,' blood is an organ every bit as much as a kidney is, yet it is perfectly legal to pay for live donors to give blood, but not to pay donors to give a spare kidney. Is that because even healthy people are likely to need blood some day, so the supply cannot be allowed to fall short, but only 'sick freaks' ever need a kidney transplant, so it is all right to leave us stranded without enough kidneys to save our lives by transplant?
Quote from: stauffenberg on August 19, 2008, 09:24:05 AMBy the medical definition of an 'organ,' blood is an organ every bit as much as a kidney is, yet it is perfectly legal to pay for live donors to give blood, but not to pay donors to give a spare kidney.� Is that because even healthy people are likely to need blood some day, so the supply cannot be allowed to fall short, but only 'sick freaks' ever need a kidney transplant, so it is all right to leave us stranded without enough kidneys to save our lives by transplant?C'mon stauffenberg, it' s not that we're sick freaks. It's that we did it to ourselves. We deserve our illness and we need to suck it up and take care of ourselves.
By the medical definition of an 'organ,' blood is an organ every bit as much as a kidney is, yet it is perfectly legal to pay for live donors to give blood, but not to pay donors to give a spare kidney.� Is that because even healthy people are likely to need blood some day, so the supply cannot be allowed to fall short, but only 'sick freaks' ever need a kidney transplant, so it is all right to leave us stranded without enough kidneys to save our lives by transplant?