If the girls had been left as they were,....... could have been essentially healthy. . I find the ethics of the choice actually made to be highly questionable.
Because of increasing numbers of pre-formed antibodies with each successive transplant, the girl may well not be able to receive more than three transplants in total, condemning her to dialysis -- if she lives that long -- for the whole second half of her life or more.
Most definitely a consciousness-raising issue. However, I find it difficult to come up with a viable solution that would not be problematic. To me, it is a case of 'damned if you do, damned if you don't'.
Quote from: stauffenberg on August 08, 2006, 05:12:34 PMBecause of increasing numbers of pre-formed antibodies with each successive transplant, the girl may well not be able to receive more than three transplants in total, condemning her to dialysis -- if she lives that long -- for the whole second half of her life or more.That is what I worried about for mySELF and no doctor or nurse will even ANSWER my question about how many transplants I could expect to have in my life..I think they like to just "be as positive as possible" even if it means skipping around the bush and trying to get away with not stating these facts!
Statements like that make me scared to move to the States. Why should I come to the States and live there and put all tax payers more in the hole with my health when if I stay in Canada it is paid for already? (sorry if this is offtopic but ... what is done is done. They parents did what they thought was best. Leave them be)
Well I find these issues don't come up in other countries where taxes pay for health care but in the States lately it is becoming a big deal where no one but Americans should get the care. So me as a Canadian is intimidated by that. The twins being separated were so they could have as normal a life as they can. So the one will be on dialysis! Doesn't seem like they had any better options. I think the issue isn't really what choice the parents made but rather who had to pay for it. Canadians do the same thing as American hospitals. In an emergency they don't turn anyone away. Yet it is only Americans who say "if you aren't an American you shouldn't get any care in our country". I mean, don't get me wrong. I am an outsider looking in and only saying how it looks. So ... on that note, is the ethics about the choice to care for the twins or are the ethics about how it was paid for?
See, in the US, it's people don't want to pay the high taxes so instead, it's people are forced to fend for them selves when it comes to health care... Many people feel they are paying too much in taxes here already. After all we're paying for the rape and slaughter of innocent citizens in Iraq, their torture in Guantanamo Bay and in secret prisons throughout the world, paying for Israeli warplanes and nuclear weapons, paying for George Bush to campaign and vacation with a luxury 747, paying for the care, feeding, education. and incarceration of illegal aliens, and the list goes on and on.