By the end of the episode, not only does she receive a kidney from frickin' Rosie O'Donnell (how'd you like to have her hanging around because she donated...I'd rather stay on Dialysis) but they didn't honestly portray what a Dialysis patient goes through. She was lying there relaxing like she was at a health spa.It's time I finish my Dialysis script and teach the world what we're suffering through damnit.Wait. Is "damnit" a curse word??
FROM FOXNEWS.COM - EDITORIALGrey's Anatomy: Entertaining but IrresponsibleTuesday, October 24, 2006by Peter Brown... One of the show's main characters, Dr. Isobel Stevens, a lingerie model turned medical intern, breaks the law and medical canon to manipulate the way heart transplants are allocated to save her fiance, Denny.The show's failing is that it gives the inaccurate impression that the transplant process is capricious, can be easily manipulated, and if so, what's the harm, since it's to help a friend.I am not a doctor, but I was fortunate enough in 2002 to receive a liver transplant. I became acquainted with the arduous process by which organs are allocated.Organ transplants are the ultimate zero-sum game. For every patient saved, someone else is not. There are many more people needing hearts, livers, lungs and kidneys than there are available organs. Thousands of Americans die each year waiting for a transplant.Everyone connected with the transplant process -- doctors, nurses, donor families, or recipients and their families -- understands this.The United Network For Organ Sharing supervises U.S. transplants. It has set criteria for evaluating patients' needs, primarily based on a recipients' closeness to death, overall health and ability to thrive afterwards. It decides who gets a transplant and who doesn't.In Grey's Anatomy, the Dr. Stevens makes her fiance sicker in order to move him up the list when a heart becomes available. Several fellow interns, instead of stopping her, aid in her efforts.The patient dies after the transplant and the other interns don't report what happened. Later, they refuse to finger the culprit in some kind of celebration of friendship. If coming attractions are to be believed, the hospital lets Dr. Stevens back on staff.Arthur Caplan, the Emmanuel and Robert Hart Professor of Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania, says what would then happen in the real world is this:--Dr. Stevens would probably face murder or manslaughter charges, since she began a process that resulted in the patient's death. She would face criminal charges for falsifying medical records. She would be dismissed from the intern program and almost certainly never get a medical license.--The hospital, aware it could lose its accreditation to do transplants and have to pay a huge damage settlement (not just to this patient's family, but to the family of the one who didn't get the heart due to the fraud), would report what happened to the state medical board, UNOS and the police.--The other interns could also face criminal charges. Their medical futures would be in doubt since they could be considered accessories to the crime....original: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,224582,00.html...........
Hi - Here's the thread regarding that LA TIMES article http://ihatedialysis.com/forum/index.php?topic=1644.0.I for one feel that the fraternity of doctor's is like a secret society, they won't expose mistakes or other related facts and they are always covering for each other. If you try to get your own medical records it's nearly impossible without a court order. The article about UNOS exhibits some of the good ol' boy courtesy given to transplant centers who were given second, third and fourth chances to clean up their act. There is no way thatanyone can say with certainty that the system cannot be manipulated to benefit a patient if the doctor has an agenda. The chances of getting caught and prosecuted are unlikely because UNOS's role is not as a policing agency. Grey's Anatomy is probably closer to the truth than the what that Bioethics Professor claims would happen.
Quote from: Stacy Without An E on October 25, 2006, 10:29:24 PMBy the end of the episode, not only does she receive a kidney from frickin' Rosie O'Donnell (how'd you like to have her hanging around because she donated...I'd rather stay on Dialysis) but they didn't honestly portray what a Dialysis patient goes through. She was lying there relaxing like she was at a health spa.It's time I finish my Dialysis script and teach the world what we're suffering through damnit.Wait. Is "damnit" a curse word??Ya exactly!!! A guy once said to me, "Oh come on! Why are you too tired to play a game online with me? All you do in dialysis is sit in a chair and watch TV!! Now stop with the excuses and play this game with me!"Grrr ... it frustrates me! There is more things people have said that shows thier ignorance but those are for another thread