As much as I don't care for Dick Cheney, I can't really believe he got special treatment. If he really was on the UNOS list for 20 months, I'd think that's probably about right for a heart. As for his age, well, I guess different tx centers have different rules about eligibility, a fact we all know too well!
My husband needs a heart transplant, he is 71 he stands no frigging chance, the heart specialist has discharged us. Perhaps if we had money and status it would be different.
they always say 'no special consideration', i am having a hard time beleiving that-
I'll never buy that he didn't get special treatment.
I found this from an LA Times article, quoting Cheney in an interview on the TODAY show: "I'll have to make a decision at some point whether or not I want to go for a transplant," he said in January 2011. "But we haven't addressed that yet."Erm, so he had not even decided to go for a transplant in January 2011, otherwise known as 14 months ago, but he'd been on the list for 20 months? source: http://articles.latimes.com/2012/mar/24/nation/la-na-cheney-heart-transplant-20120325
Oh geez, the LAST think I want to do is to defend Darth Vadar
As for the age limit, well, he wasn't transplanted at either Johns Hopkins or at Mayo Clinic, so their rules are moot. He was transplanted at Inova Heart and Vascular Institute in Virginia, and they don't have a specific upper age limit.http://www.inovaheart.org/heart-care/transplant-program/home/#eligible
My brain was in high gear last night, and I kept thinking about people who get "special consideration" when it comes to transplantation.How would "special consideration" even work? Are we implying that UNOS would faff about with the waitlist and maybe falsely add accrued time? For what benefit? Could someone really pay UNOS to get a donor heart, jumping the queue? Wouldn't UNOS have to be involved in these shenanigans? Anyone want to hazard a guess?
And I think calling him "a monster" is certainly nothing more than a childish ad hominem attack.
I really do not want to derail this discussion, as I've said several times, by getting into Cheney's history...
After a brief Google search, it seems the average wait for a Status 1 Heart Transplant candidate is 6 to 36 months. So a 20 month wait doesn't seem to indicate by itself any bias or special treatment. Given media reports of Mr. Cheney's pre-transplant condition and medical history it would seem Status 1 was probably appropriate.
Cariad, I don't have any intention of reading Steve Job's biography to discover the timeline of his illnesses, but maybe you know...was he cancer free for the requisite 5 years before having his liver transplant? If not, what did his hospital risk in transplanting him despite his cancer history? Did they put his life in danger in their attempt to save it? If so, why? Did they willingly put their reputation at risk (along with their stats) just so they could tx Steve Jobs? Maybe that's exactly what they chose to do. I'd love to find out.
Re Cheney, I have to admit that I really do think he was that sick. He's been ill with cardiac problems for nearly 40 years, and my understanding is that he had undergone just about every possible intervention/procedure short of tx, the last one being the pump. I still think it is likely that those on the list above Cheney who were as sick or sicker may simply have died, paving the way for Cheney to advance more quickly up the list. Only the good die young, you know. LOL!
I absolutely agree that we are extremely "market-driven", but I am not sure how this mindset influences the availability and allocation of organs. Maybe it does, but I'd still love to know exactly HOW a rich, influential person can jump the queue. Did Inova contact UNOS and tell them they had a high profile patient who needed a heart, and did UNOS cooperate with them in finding a heart ASAP, or did they tell Inova to wait in line like everyone else?
People are going to believe what they want to believe. As I get older, I'm more and more convinced of that. Half of me wants to believe that Cheney is truly a non-fictional Darth Vadar and was able to use his money and influence to get what he wanted. The other half of me wants to believe that the people at UNOS act in good faith because I am on their list, and I don't want to be treated unfairly because I happen not to have said money and/or influence. That leaves me stuck in the middle, more curious than anything. I love a good conspiracy story as much as the next guy, but I'd like to see some scenarios based in evidence. It's one thing to claim that Cheney jumped the queue but it's another (and more interesting) to discover if he really DID, and if so, HOW?
Who would want to clean house when she could spend a pleasant afternoon reading OPTN's thoracic organ allocation policy?
Now, Cheney DID have a LVAD, and that is one of the criteria listed by OPTN. So, I think he WAS sick enough. Unlike kidney patients, it seems that cardiac patients are allocated a status, basically defining how sick they are. It looks to me like Cheney was status 1A since he had an LVAD. They begin talking about ABO typing on page 18 (a big hunk of this document is about lung tx).Interestingly, the rules regarding accruing wait time are vastly different from those regarding renal tx. If you accrue waiting time at a lower status, you cannot carry that time over if you are upgraded to a higher status. Maybe it is this fact that has led to some confusion about how long Cheney was listed. (See page 19 for this information.)