Cadaveric organs are a scarce resource, and whereas an 80 year old might get 5-10 years out of one, a 30 year old can get fifty ...
This is not Unicorn Fairyland General Hospital where the doctors, say, "Gee wow that's somebody's Grandma. Granted she's 90 and has Alzheimer's, but she has grandkids., That 30 year old over there doesn't. Let's give the kidney to Grandma!!!"
And, okarol, I noticed that you said your daughter had a kidney transplant. How about if that kidney had gone to a 80 year old because your daughter's donor shared your attitude? Something tells me you'd share my feelings, and don't try and tell me you'd be happy for them, because you wouldn't. I've been on dialysis for a year and am waiting for a kidney and I'd be hopping mad if some 90 year olld at my center got a kidney and I didn't.I don't go for all that happy-dappy PC nonsense of "everyone shoud get a kidney." No, everyone should not get a kidney, especially with the scarcity of them, and that is why they do not put anyone older than 65 on the list. That is stupid to let a young person die so some old person can have "a few more years." I'd rather see a 90 year old die than an 18 year old, and most other people will agree, like it or not.
Please read about the new UNOS program to distribute Expanded criteria donor (ECD) kidneys: A kidney donated for transplantation from any brain dead donor over the age of 60 years; or from a donor over the age of 50 years with two of the following: A history of hypertension, a terminal serum creatinine greater than or equal to 1.5 mg/dl, or death resulting from a cerebral vascular accident (stroke).These are usually for patients 60 and older.Lots more changes are in the works at UNOS.