Organ Donation
“To the world you may be one person, but to one person you may be the world.” (Dr.seuss) “every day, an average of 79 people receive organ transplants. However, an average of 22 people dies each day waiting for transplants that can't take place because of the shortage of donated organs.”(The Need Is Real: Data) we can reduce the number of people dying from 22 people to 0 people if each of sign up for organ donation. Every day we can see many people come to hospital with life threatening injury from an accident or stroke. The doctors will try to save the patient’s life but sometimes nothing can be done and the patient will die. If that one patient be a donor, then he can save the lives of up to 8 people; therefore, preventing
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There are many ancient Greek myths that are considered apocryphal regarding transplant, but “by 800 B.C. Indian doctors had likely begun grafting skin, which is the largest organ, from one part of the body to another to repair wounds and burns.”(History.com Staff) Later, during 16th century, Italian surgeon Gasparo Tagliacozzi, the father of plastic surgery, reconstructed noses and ears using skin from patients’ arms. He found that skin from a different donor usually caused the procedure to fail, observing the immune response that his successors would come to recognize as transplant rejection.(History.com Staff) The first successful transplant in the U.S. was made possible by a living donor and took place in 1954. One twin donated a kidney to his identical twin brother. As a result of the growing need for organs for transplantation, living donation has increased as an alternative to deceased donation, and about 6,000 living donations take place each year. Most living donations happen among family members or between close friends. Some living donations take place between people unknown to each other (Organ and Tissue Donation from Living Donors). Recently, in 2010, Spanish doctors conducted the world’s first full face transplant on a man injured in a shooting accident. A number of partial face transplants had already taken place around the world (History.com …show more content…
This can be done in different ways such as register with your state's donor registry (visit OrganDonor.gov), or fill out an organ donor card when you get or renew your driver's license” (Organ Donation Facts). Later, upon the death of a person, the hospital contacts the organ procurement organization (OPO). The OPO manages the organ recovery process and checks the state of organ donor registry, and if the person is already registered as a donor, then they will inform his family. If not, they will ask the family to offerise donation. Then medical tests are carried out, such as blood group and tissue type matching. They'll also look at the donor's medical history and ask the family some questions about them. This will help confirm whether or not the organ donation can take place. Then the best matched patience will be contacted by their transplanted teams. This is the call that every single person on waiting list is waiting for because it means a second chance of life (Why Be a