ChatterBank6 mins ago
All Adults Will Be Presumed To Be Organ Donors …
…..unless they explicitly opt out.
//An opt-out system for organ donation will soon become law after it passed its last hurdle in Parliament.
Campaigners hope the new system will encourage us to make our wishes known before we die, with an online register for those opting out.
Research has shown more than 80 per cent of adults in England would definitely donate their organs or would consider doing so. However, only 37 per cent of Britons have registered as donors on the NHS Organ Donor Register and received a donor card.
However, Professor Chris Rudge, a leading transplant surgeon, has said he would opt out on the grounds that the State should not presume to take a citizen’s organs. Last year he said: ‘Organ donation should be a present … I am so horribly opposed to a change in the law.’//
https:/ /www.da ilymail .co.uk/ health/ article -665966 9/All-a dults-p resumed -organ- donors- unless- explici tly-opt -new-la w.html
Your thoughts?. For or against?
//An opt-out system for organ donation will soon become law after it passed its last hurdle in Parliament.
Campaigners hope the new system will encourage us to make our wishes known before we die, with an online register for those opting out.
Research has shown more than 80 per cent of adults in England would definitely donate their organs or would consider doing so. However, only 37 per cent of Britons have registered as donors on the NHS Organ Donor Register and received a donor card.
However, Professor Chris Rudge, a leading transplant surgeon, has said he would opt out on the grounds that the State should not presume to take a citizen’s organs. Last year he said: ‘Organ donation should be a present … I am so horribly opposed to a change in the law.’//
https:/
Your thoughts?. For or against?
Answers
If nothing else this thread shows that there's no limit to the insane flights of fancy embarked on by some.
10:40 Sat 02nd Feb 2019
-- answer removed --
This sounds like a great idea in theory but how will it be in practice. I thought that some organs such as the heart had to be transplanted as soon as possible not kept in storage. Also over the coming years wouldn't there be a danger of more organs being collected against the number of transplants needed. We would need many more hospitals with specialised units in order to store the surplus organs. Would the relatives still be able to object ?As some Abers have pointed out would you still be eligible for a transplant if you have opted-out? There are some people with serious medical conditions who wouldn't be able to donate and would have to opt out. Their organs would not be suitable.Life could get very complicated in the years to come for some people.
After having read through this entire thread...
Just one question?
If someone is willing to donate their body to a medical teaching university after death, but not willing to donate organs (myself) Should I still be allowed an organ if I needed one but declined to donate one?
(where the F is a philosophy section?)
Just one question?
If someone is willing to donate their body to a medical teaching university after death, but not willing to donate organs (myself) Should I still be allowed an organ if I needed one but declined to donate one?
(where the F is a philosophy section?)
As a card carrying, registered donor, I have no qualms about being so. At least some one will confirm that I am actually dead, when I'm dead. I can understand that a lot of people would be against it and I don't think opting in or out should be a prerequisite to accepting an organ, if one is needed. An organ recipient may well have second thoughts, if push came to shove.
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