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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page research paper that explores the issues surrounding organ transplantation. The write specifically looks at the ethical issues raised by a Colorado man advertising for a donor on the Internet and receiving a donor kidney as a result. The issue of payment for donor organs is also discussed. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khdonkid.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Internet at MatchingDonors.com (Scott, 2004). The surgery was initially delayed because the lead surgeon raised ethical concerns about the procedure. However, the surgery was allowed to proceed because Smitty, the
donor, had received no monetary compensation for his donation and his stated motivation was that he wanted to do "some good in society, something big that I can look back
and be proud of" (Scott, 2004, p. A1). However, procuring a donor kidney in this manner raises numerous ethical issues. The private agency that manages the nations organ supply
opposes this website for several reasons. First of all, it is a fee-based service and it is argued that this undermines the fairness of organ distribution, which is operates on
the idea that organs should go to the sickest individuals and those who have been waiting the longest. It costs $295 per month to post an ad on the site
for a donor; however, the owners of the site assert that half of the postings on the site at present were posted free of charge because the individuals could not
afford the fee (Scott, 2004). However, the Internet site still addresses two of the most sensitive issues in the field organ transplant, which are the use of money to
encourage organ donations and the wisdom of encouraging healthy people to risk their health by donating organs to strangers (Scott, 2004). There is a slight, but very real risk, of
death or disability for these donors and also experts fear that this situation could exploit donors who are not psychologically stable (Scott, 2004). This issue arises from the fact
that transplantation techniques have become sophisticated, reliable and often save the life of the recipient. But there is an acute shortage of available organs and patients often die while waiting
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