We stand at a cultural crossroads, the intersection of the Culture of Life and the Culture of Death. At this critical juncture, the choices we make matter, now and forever. Therefore, the members of Life is Worth Living, a lay apostolate, have chosen to promote the Culture of Life.

Our mission is to strive to affirm -- in thought, word, and deed -- the infinite preciousness of human life; to encourage service to others rather than radical self-interest; and to promote a climate of public opinion that recognizes the right of all human beings to life, respect, compassionate care, appropriate medical treatment, and equality under the law.

 

Docs push for cash rewards for organ donation

posted by Julie Grimstad
Thursday, June 26, 2008


This is a disturbing article about physicians wanting to try paying people to donate either their own organs or those of their "brain dead" loved ones. The article also contains some information about the actual percentage of organs suitable for transplant that are now being harvested. Consider this statement: "'If you've only got 20 percent more you get organs from, is it 20 percent who could be swayed?' [Dr.] Hippen said." If they are already getting up to 80% of all transplantable organs, why are organ procurers always crying about not enough organ donors? Some of us can't be cajoled, coerced or bought!!! See article at:
 

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Do Your Organs Belong to the Government?

posted by Julie Grimstad
Wednesday, June 18, 2008


DO YOUR ORGANS BELONG TO THE GOVERNMENT?

By Paul A. Byrne, M.D.

June, 2008

Recent news reports of responses in persons declared "brain dead" should have alerted everyone that "brain death" is not true death. These observed responses prevented organ transplantation plans from going forward. Zack Dunlap later reported that he heard discussions of his death, but could not respond. Val Thomas had flat brain waves for 17 hours before her response was observed. Such cases ought to be of grave concern to every citizen of the United States of America, and to the rest of the world.

We are continually bombarded with ads to be an organ donor. We are told that we are giving the "gift of life" in organ donation. We are led to believe that organs are taken for transplantation only after true death. We are seldom, if ever, made aware that after true death the heart, liver, and other vital organs are not suitable for transplantation.

True death is when the soul separates from the body. When the person is living, the soul certainly has not separated from the body. The heart, liver and other vital organs are suitable for transplantation only when there is circulation and respiration, albeit supported by a ventilator. After true death the ventilator cannot support circulation and respiration. Vital organs from a corpse are useless for transplantation.

The Federal Government is much involved with obtaining organs for transplantation. During the Clinton Presidency, the Secretary of Health and Human Services issued an edict that when death is imminent all medical records must be sent to the Organ Procurement Organization (OPO) to determine suitability of the person's organs for transplantation. This edict has been updated and placed into law within the HIPAA Regulations (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996). While many believe HIPAA protects personal privacy, there is a list of 14 reasons why the Federal Government can obtain and use your medical information without your permission. Organ donation is one of them.

If the OPO determines that your organs are suitable, a "designated requestor" is sent to the hospital to seek permission from relatives, close friends or a government official. This is done under the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA) that was passed in all 50 States in 1968. In 2006, the UAGA was revised. The Revised UAGA has already been placed into statute in 30 states and has been introduced in 10 more states just this year. This Revised Act makes everyone a "prospective donor;" meaning it is presumed that you intend to be an organ donor unless you have signed a refusal.

Whenever attempts are made to add or delete words from an existing statute, someone has a reason for doing so. Previously the UAGA required you to be "of sound mind" to be an organ donor. That requirement has been removed. A person who gives any sort of medical or legal consent ought to be "of sound mind" in order for the consent to be valid. So, why drop "sound mind" from the existing Act? Could the drafters of the Revised UAGA be concerned that a person under the influence of sedatives or with a brain injury might not be considered "of sound mind," yet they still want to be able to get his/her signature or verbal consent to organ donation?

The Revised UAGA permits 15 ½ year old persons (in some states, 14 year old persons) to sign to be organ donors when they apply for a learner's permit to drive. This is a time when a teenager might be easily influenced, even intimidated. Parents can override a minor child's consent or refusal to be a donor prior to age 18. What is the purpose of permitting a child to sign or refuse to give an anatomical gift if it can be overridden? What does it mean "if a parent is reasonably available?" Will the search for a parent of a child who has consented to be a donor be as diligent as the search for a parent of a child who has refused?

The Revised UAGA's Section 8 takes advantage of the fact that previous decisions of a person (who is currently unable to communicate) are open to interpretation. The Act ensures that questions about a person's intentions are decided in favor of donation. For example, a donor's revocation of a gift of a body part is not to be construed as a refusal for others to make gifts of the donor's other body parts. Likewise, a donor's gift of one part is not to be construed as a refusal that would bar others from making gifts of other parts, absent the donor's express contrary intent. Section 8 firmly states that a donor's decision to make an anatomical gift is to be honored and is not subject to change by others. Thus Section 8 takes away from families the right or authority to consent to, amend or revoke anatomical donations made by donors during their lifetimes, even though alert relatives might make different decisions based on current circumstances and complete information.

The Revised UAGA expands the prioritized list of "classes of persons" who can make an anatomical gift of the body or body parts of a so-called "decedent" if the decedent had neither consented nor refused to be a donor. The list now includes the decedent's health care agent, adult grandchildren and close friends. It descends from the highest class of persons to the next and so forth when a search is done for someone on the list who is "reasonably available." The Act states, "Reasonably available means able to be contacted by a procurement organization without undue effort." Undue effort is not defined. Could it mean that not getting a response to a telephone call is sufficient to go to the next class of persons?

The Revised Act states that a revocation of an anatomical gift "does not equal a refusal." So, if you change your mind, you not only have to revoke your prior anatomical gift, but also issue a formal refusal. Isn't this close to an opt-out or presumed consent system? Such a system presumes fulfillment of all legal requirements for consent to take organs unless a person has opted out by a formal witnessed document of refusal. Eight European countries have a presumed consent system. Such a bill has been introduced in Delaware, but has not been acted upon yet.

The Revised Act has language that does not protect the rights of prospective donors. In trying so hard to facilitate obtaining suitable organs for transplantation, the Act's drafters have overridden the donor's right to fully and explicitly informed consent.

The Revised Act does not protect the lives of prospective donors. It does not list or define "measures necessary to ensure the suitability of an organ for transplantation or therapy." This is of concern because the Act states that "unless the donor's declaration (living will) expressly provides for the contrary, the proposed law "prohibits" these measures from being withheld or withdrawn from a prospective donor. A "prospective donor" may be someone who is "near death" and yet the organ procurement medical team can initiate measures that may actually do harm to the still living prospective donor—such as increasing fluids to a head-injured patient, administering Heparin and Regitine, etc., in order to "ensure the medical suitability of an organ." It is absolutely appalling to think that, once a person is identified as a potential donor, organs for transplant become more important than the person to whom they belong!

Organs for transplantation are primarily obtained from those declared "brain dead." This is labeled Donation by Brain Death (DBD). These are patients who have disease or injury to their brain manifested by altered brain functioning. Typically, a patient who has been declared "brain dead" has a beating heart, normal blood pressure and respiration supported by a ventilator. When cut into, he/she moves, squirms and grimaces if a paralyzing drug or anesthetic is not administered first. These are all signs of life.

The Harvard Criteria (on brain death) was published in 1968. Thirty more different sets of criteria were published by 1978. Since then, many more have been published. There is no general agreement as to which set of criteria should be used to declare a person "brain dead." Consequently, a person could be declared dead by one set, but still living by other sets! Every set of criteria includes an Apnea Test. ("Apnea" means the absence of breathing.) This test is done by taking away the life-supporting ventilator for up to 10 minutes. This is medical suffocation. The patient can only get worse with this test. This test is commonly done without requesting permission.

If all this isn't enough to draw attention, when a patient does not fulfill any of the differing sets of criteria for determining "brain death," but the desire is to get his/her organs, a Do-Not-Resuscitate (DNR) order is obtained and the ventilator is removed. When the patient is without a pulse (but not without a heart beat) for 2-5 minutes, this becomes the signal to take the organs. This is labeled Donation by Cardiac Death (DCD).

Yes, much is being done to get your organs. For an organ to be suitable for transplantation, it must be healthy and it must come from a living person. Please wake up! Organ excision does not benefit the person from whom the organs are taken. IT CAUSES HIS OR HER DEATH!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Paul A. Byrne, a Neonatologist, is Director of Neonatology and Director of Pediatrics at St. Charles Mercy Hospital in Oregon, Ohio; Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, University of Toledo College of Medicine; Board Certified in Pediatrics and Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine; Member of Fellowship of Catholic Scholars; past-President of the Catholic Medical Association (USA); and author of numerous articles on "brain death" and organ transplantation in medical and law journals and lay press.

WANT TO LEARN MORE? Articles by Dr. Byrne and his colleagues are available online at:

The Life Guardian Foundation: www.thelifeguardian.org

The International Foundation for Genetic Research: www.michaelfund.org

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Organ Donation and Transplantation Q&A

posted by Julie Grimstad
Thursday, May 22, 2008


The impulse to give the “gift of life” by donating your organs is a noble one, but it is unwise to make this decision on impulse alone.

Informed consent is the ethical cornerstone of medical decision making. Without truthful and complete disclosure of information about a procedure, it is impossible to give informed consent. Here are answers to questions about the donation and transplantation of vital organs—questions you may not even know you should ask.[*]

The most important question: Are organ donors really dead before their vital organs are removed?

The simple answer is that donors of vital organs cannot be and are not dead. Before organ transplantation was possible, physicians cautiously determined death in order not to treat the living as dead. Today, both “brain death” and “cardiac death” are hastily declared, not for the patient’s welfare, but because removal of vital organs must be done before they begin to deteriorate due to loss of blood circulation. Vital organs are useless if physicians wait the time necessary to determine that a person is certainly dead.

If “brain death” is not death, what is it?

“Brain death” is a legal fiction. This fiction enables surgeons to remove living organs, without legal liability, from patients who are not dead yet, but will be after their organs are excised. Consider these facts:

  • A person can be pronounced “brain dead” while he or she has a beating heart, as well as normal pulse, blood pressure, color and temperature. All signs of life.
  • “Brain dead” patients’ wounds heal. “Brain dead” children grow. “Brain dead” pregnant women, kept alive for extended periods, gestate and deliver healthy babies and produce milk. All signs of life.
  • A “brain dead” donor is given a paralyzing drug to prevent squirming and grimacing when the incision is made to remove organs. Even paralyzed, his or her pulse races and blood pressure shoots up. Dead people don’t react to being cut.

Accounts of patients who have recovered after a firm diagnosis of “brain death” demonstrate that “brain dead” patients are not certainly dead. In some cases they are not even close to it. Take Zack Dunlap’s story. In November 2007, this 21-year-old Oklahoman flipped over on his 4-Wheeler and suffered catastrophic brain injuries. Thirty-six hours later, doctors at United Regional Healthcare System in Wichita Falls, Texas, declared him “brain dead.” Preparations to harvest his organs were underway when friends and relatives gathered to say their final goodbyes. His cousin, a nurse, wanting to make certain, scraped his pocket knife along the bottom of Zack’s foot. Zack jerked his foot away. Just months later, Zack is walking and talking. He recalls hearing the doctor say he was dead and being “mad inside” but unable to move. Now, he’s impatiently moving toward a full recovery.

Recoveries like Zack’s should at least make us wonder: How many potential organ donors are prematurely written off? This is not an unimportant question, particularly if the potential donor is you or your loved one.

Must a person be declared “brain dead” in order to be used as an organ donor?

No. Donor eligibility has been broadened to include another group of people who are not dead yet—patients on ventilators whom doctors label “hopeless” or “vegetative.” New rules were established to permit “donation by cardiac death” (DCD). DCD was proposed because more organs are wanted to satisfy the ever increasing demand and decisions to withdraw life support have become so easy and private.

What is “donation by cardiac death”?

A patient or family can agree to have the ventilator turned off and a “do not resuscitate” order written, then consent to organ donation. The patient is usually taken to an operating room where the ventilator is turned off. If or when the patient becomes pulseless, “cardiac death” is declared. In order to ensure healthy organs, speed is of the essence. The organ retrieval team waits only 2 to 5 minutes before beginning organ removal. The donor may be given an anesthetic just in case the team acts too quickly.

If you go without a pulse for two to five minutes in some hospitals, you’re a dead organ donor. In other places, at two minutes or five minutes or 30 minutes, they’re still trying to revive you. This means that patients in identical states are deemed dead if they are destined to be organ donors or alive when destined for resuscitation attempts.

Conclusion: The thrust of protocols that permit organ donation after “brain death” and “cardiac death” is simply this: “Let’s call them dead so we won’t be accused of murder when we stop their beating hearts and cut out their living organs.” For this reason, transplantation of vital organs taken from “dead” people can not be morally justified.



[*]The sole focus of this brochure is donation of vital organs (also called vascularized organs—organs that require continuous circulation of blood to remain useful for purposes of transplantation) after “brain death” or “cardiac death.” Other types of organ or tissue donation are beyond the scope of this brochure.

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