Quote from: cariad on February 25, 2011, 08:02:08 AMOh. My God. Just typed a response to MM and lost it. Going to have a good cry now. Will try to work up energy to respond later. That's OK. Don't waste your time and energy! The whole "let's start selling kidneys" thing is off topic, and I apologize for that. That's not in the proposal we should be focusing on.I think I am guilty of letting the media guide my thinking. It's pretty easy to condence a 40 paged document and reduce it to a scary soundbite. The whole idea is not to deprive older people of kidneys but, rather, to better match the kidneys that come available like the doc said in the above-linked video. The woman who had been waiting 15 years said that she'd rather her children have a kidney if they needed one, but of course any mother would say that. She might not be so accomodating if the kidney she had been waiting 15 years for went to a child she didn't know.Fifteen years...what a deeply depressing thought. And that woman is in Chicago. So am I. I'm doomed.I've had a couple of thoughts and wonder what the rest of you think. Certain IHD members, myself included, bang on about "optimal dialysis" and how standard dialysis as practiced in the US in and of itself can CAUSE enough cardiovascular damage to a patient as to make him eventually unhealthy enough to stay on the waiting list, thus dooming him to a life on dialysis forever. If we really want to be fair, we need to start BEFORE the patient gets to the waiting list; we should make sure that all patients are given dialysis in such a way that does not threaten their chances for a transplant. I know that some people are just too sick to make it that long on dialysis, but there are so many others who are kept alive by violent dialysis sessions but are also damaged with each treatment. Change the way dialysis is delivered, and more people won't die while awaiting transplantation.The other thing that just struck me is the issue of multiple shots at transplantation. If someone judges that you are too old for a transplant because you've "lived your life" and now it is time to give someone else a chance, then does the same rationale hold true if you've already had one transplant and now it is time to give someone else a chance too? I'm waiting for just ONE chance while others have already had one, two or even three transplants. As more people are stricken with ESRD, more people are transplanted, which means more kidneys end up going to more people who have already had a transplant and the rest of those who are waiting for just ONE go are pushed further and further down the queue. I can't imagine the stress that would come if you knew that once you've had your transplant, you're done, so good luck, but on the other hand, I am now feeling the stress of what it might feel like if someone decides that being 53 means you're screwed. I've skimmed the proposal and can't offhand find any reference to how they propose to change how they deal with people who have already been transplanted but have had the graft fail, but if someone else has read it and can explain this, I'd be grateful. Again, someone has to make a value judgment and play God.
Oh. My God. Just typed a response to MM and lost it. Going to have a good cry now. Will try to work up energy to respond later.
I will try to read the proposal and comment before the deadline. I suspect that it will all be a waste of time, though. I think there will be such huge medical advancements that by the time they were to implement these changes, we'll be well on our way to saying "Who needs cadaveric donation anymore? There's a better way!" Fingers crossed.