BostonUniStudent t1_itgv40e wrote
An opt out or presumed consent system could help also.
There are many viable and salvageable organs that are just thrown out as medical waste because we can't find the paperwork saying this person is an organ donor. Or because the additional barrier to declare yourself as one is too much effort for some people. Even though they would happily have saved other people's lives after they died.
https://labblog.uofmhealth.org/industry-dx/how-opt-out-donation-could-affect-us-waiting-lists
According to University of Michigan, this could provide up to half of the needed organs (52%).
Many countries are trending this way.
[deleted] t1_ith3104 wrote
It seems wild that this isn't already the case
AvsFan08 t1_itij9hg wrote
Religion. People literally think that their body needs to be whole for heaven
Hawklet98 t1_itjhjlb wrote
If they’re right they’re gonna have a bitch of a time in the afterlife. The embalming process is going to make their reanimated multi-dimensional ghost corpse less than user friendly.
ImBuck t1_itk8mxr wrote
Tissue harvesting is a huge industry in America.
AmiAlter t1_itl2g56 wrote
Wait, half a teaspoon of ground up human skin can go for almost $500? Can I quite literally sell my skin?
capital_crunch t1_itjlm9r wrote
Why don’t you donate a kidney? You only need one. And part of your liver now?
Hawklet98 t1_itjm6z7 wrote
I’m ok particularly attacked to mg kidneys. I offered a guy I went to college with a kidney when he was in need. Different blood type, so we didn’t explore it further. I’m swabbed myself and am now a part of some sort of “be the match” bone marrow database in case my marrow can help someone. And no one wants any of my liver. It’s been through a lot.
capital_crunch t1_itnhyfu wrote
Sure you did.
Hawklet98 t1_itni924 wrote
Your doubt raises an interesting question: How much of a lowlife does one have to be to not even believe other people can be decent?
capital_crunch t1_itnw5cw wrote
What kind of pitiful donkey does one have to be to ask the questions you did. Take your fart gaslighting bs to someone who cares.
This is Reddit. No one is decent. It's a website of self back pats and humbragging
Hawklet98 t1_ito5uou wrote
capital_crunch t1_itv0pbb wrote
Speak with your words. You can do it!
Having an opinion is not projection. But it is a typical response from people who can’t form cohesive arguments. It bothers their minds so they say it must be other’s problems instead of their own.
Sariel007 OP t1_itikdbs wrote
Honestly that probably doesn't even crack the top 10 list of crazy things they believe.
AvsFan08 t1_itiqg05 wrote
Probably not
Vitztlampaehecatl t1_itjrjnu wrote
Ironic, in a country where more than half of all men were mutilated at birth.
capital_crunch t1_itjiy4t wrote
My body my choice.
AvsFan08 t1_itjq2ua wrote
I'm not saying it isn't your choice.
SwashbucklingWeasels t1_itk5j1e wrote
I know you’re just trolling, but I’d like to get your thoughts on this- if “you” are a soul that can live beyond bodily form, then once you leave an earthly body isn’t that not yours anymore?
Edit: I put “you” in quotes because I was thinking of the “‘you’ don’t have a soul, ‘you’ have a body” thought process.
lunchboxultimate01 t1_ith9p93 wrote
I've heard that too. Even if the improvement is in the lower estimates of 3% - 10%, it seems an opt-out system is worth it and doesn't really have any drawbacks.
>Under the most conservative estimate, it would have reduced the number of people taken off the list due to illness or death by between 3% and 10%. And under ideal circumstances, it might have decreased waitlist removals by 52%
tryplot t1_ithw293 wrote
as a 27 year old, I'm not opting in, because that restricts my ability to donate my body to a university to help train future surgeons. they may be able to grow the organs, but until A I. improves significantly, we still need people trained to put them in.
BostonUniStudent t1_ithwmkw wrote
In an opt out system, you always have the right to opt out. Without question.
tryplot t1_ithwzgw wrote
true, but that'd be one extra step between me and doing something productive (given my expected time of death). it's easier for me to say yes to one thing rather than actively say no to one thing and then yes to another.
BostonUniStudent t1_ithyiyo wrote
And that slight inconvenience, which would be no more work than making an account here and typing your comments, is worth half a million lives annually?
(According to the estimates in the Michigan study, based on US numbers only)
tryplot t1_ithz2f0 wrote
my one body does is not enough to save half a million lives, my original comment was saying why I wasn't opting in, not a comment on a presumed consent system. it seems that you are overly angry about a hypothetical situation where my one opinion decides the laws.
aospaghettios t1_itjp7g2 wrote
As a transplant recipient, fuck right off
Natsume117 t1_itj7d4a wrote
So you want to do something productive, but you’re unwilling to be very mildly inconvenienced by a small extra step? Opting out wouldn’t even be a difficult thing, should literally take a few moments.
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