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- X-Last-Updated: 2002/03/24
- From: mike_holloway@hotmail.com (Michael Holloway)
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.transplant,sci.med,sci.answers,news.answers
- Subject: FAQ: bit.listserv.transplant, Organ transplant ng (Part 1 of 4)
- Followup-To: bit.listserv.transplant
- Organization: none
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Reply-To: mike_holloway@hotmail.com (Michael Holloway)
- Summary: This is a description of the bit.listserv.transplant newsgroup
- and its parent mail list, TRNSPLNT. Frequently asked
- questions regarding organ transplantation are addressed.
- A list of resources for transplantation patients is provided.
- Pointers to other Internet transplantation resources are provided.
- Originator: faqserv@penguin-lust.MIT.EDU
- Date: 17 Apr 2004 11:26:57 GMT
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-
- Archive-name: medicine/transplant-faq/part1
-
- Anti-spam:
- This entire domain and all associated e-mail addresses are located in the
- State of Washington,
- and sending mail to addresses at this domain is subject to the provisions
- of the Revised Code of Washington.
-
- Part 1 of bit.listserv.transplant FAQ
-
- Last updated 3/23/02
-
- Updated subscribe information for DIALYSIS email discussion list Part 1,
- section I.
-
- Contents
- Part 1:
- I. Discussion forums
- TRNSPLNT mail list - How to subscribe
- DIALYSIS mail list - How to subscribe
- Caregivers Support Group
- Australian Transplant and Dialysis discussion list
- Second Wind discussion list
- Kidney/Pancreas Support Group
- HTX, Heart and Lung Transplant Support Group
- LiverSupport-L
- The Organ Transplant Support Group Chat
- List of weekly transplant chats online
- II. Selected organ and tissue transplant info via gopher and WWW
- III. Organ donation and transplantation, frequently asked questions
- IV. The organ donor shortage
- V. Transplant and organ donation myths
- VI. Organ donor awareness postage stamp campaign and other awareness
- materials
-
- Part 2:
- I. Things your doctor may not have told you - Bits of advice for transplant
- patients
- Everyday stuff
- Drinking water
- Ibuprofen
- Packing for the hospital
- II. Sources of information on organ and tissue donation, transplantation,
- and transplant centers
- Patient support groups, services, books and videos
- Religious organizations views on organ donation
- - National Donor Sabbath web site
- List of US lung transplant centers
- Living-Related Liver Transplant Programs in the US
- III. Non-US professional transplant organizations and patient support
- groups
- IV. Transplant fund raising
- V. Live kidney donor information
- VI. Renal transplant specific sources and information
- VII. Bone marrow transplant specific sources
- Bone marrow donation information
-
- Part 3:
- I. National Transplant Patient Resources Directory
- II. Other Resources
- a. Other companies offering pharmaceutical delivery services
- b. Financial and travel assistance
- c. Medicare drug cost coverage
- d. Additional government programs of interest
- e. Patient specific education, support, and products
-
- Part 4: From TransWeb
- I. Organ and Tissue Donation: A Gift of Life
- What do I do if I want to donate?
- Top 10 Misconceptions About Organ Donation
- II. Ask TransWeb Questions and Answers
- III. Frequently Asked Questions
- IV. Organizations Promoting Donation
-
- About this FAQ
- --------------
- This FAQ is archived at rtfm.mit.edu and available by anonymous ftp
- under pub/usenet-by-group/bit.listserv.transplant. Its available by gopher
- from any site with a link to the MIT ftp archive, such as
- ccsun42.csie.nctu.edu.tw where faqs are listed under newsgroup hierarchy.
- URL: http://www.lib.ox.ac.uk/internet/news/faq/bit.listserv.transplant.html
- or
- http://www.faqs.org/faqs/medicine/transplant-faq/part1/index.html
-
- The subjects treated in this FAQ are, for the most part, specific for the
- state of organ and tissue transplantation in the United States. If
- anyone would be interested in providing information that might be helpful
- to people of other countries please let me know. If anyone has other
- information they would like to have included in this FAQ please send it
- along.
-
- Many thanks to the people who have contributed information and otherwise
- helped with the FAQ: Alex Bost, Dan Flasar, Kimberly Montgomery, Arthur
- Flatau, Katherine Eberle, Anne Treffeisen, Rosalie Katchen, Joel Newman,
- Gerald Huber, Ken Lifton, Dale Ester, Jim Warren, Jeff Punch, Fritz
- Dolak, Julio Real, John Abbott, Marion Leska, Karen Couture, Lou
- Bushfield, Lisa Carroccio, Kandy Darroch, Dorothy Bourdon, and Luis Enrique
- Acero.
-
- Mike Holloway
- mike_holloway@hotmail.com
-
- =========================================================================
- I. Description of the TRNSPLNT mail list and bit.listserv.transplant
- =========================================================================
-
- The Usenet newsgroup bit.listserv.transplant is a bi-directional echo of
- the listserv mail list TRNSPLNT. If you have an interest in
- transplantation, and think that the posted news and discussions are of
- interest, it may be more convenient for you to subscribe. Be sure to
- save the instruction file that is sent to you automatically when you
- subscribe. To have a list of listserv commands sent to you, send mail to
- LISTSERV@WUVMD.WUSTL.EDU and place either HELP or INFO REFCARD on the
- first line of text. This list includes commands for unsubscribing,
- setting your subscription to "nomail", and other useful commands. To
- remove yourself from the list, send SIGNOFF TRNSPLNT.
-
- All posts to TRNSPLNT or bit.listserv.transplant are archived by the
- listserv system at Washington U. You can get an index of the
- archive by following the directions below in Dan's introduction.
- You can search the archive as a database and retrieve individual
- articles via a keyword search by following the directions in the
- file obtained by sending INFO DATABASE to LISTSERV@WUVMD.WUSTL.EDU
-
- Below is the introduction to TRNSPLNT written by Dan Flasar. Since Dan
- started the group early in 1993 the posts have been on everything from
- copies of news and information to recipes for low salt diets. It has
- been a useful electronic support group for some participants who are
- either waiting for a transplant, recovering from a transplant, or just
- getting on with life after a transplant. We encourage recipients,
- caregivers and medical professionals to introduce themselves to the
- group. The list is also a tool for organ and tissue donor education.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- TRNSPLNT on LISTSERV@WUVMD.WUSTL.EDU
-
- TRNSPLNT is a discussion list for organ transplant recipients and
- anyone else intested in the issues, experiences and realities of
- living with an organ trasplant.
-
- Over the last 30 years, the number of transplants performed each year
- has grown steadily in both absolute numbers and type of organs
- transplanted.
-
- Though there are hospital, clinical and pharmaceutical
- industry-sponsored newsletters, there are few, if any, completely
- independent discussion forums for those who have experienced this
- oftentimes dramaticaly effective therapy.
-
- There are many life issues for the transplant patient that are simply
- not covered in medical literature or by medical personnel. TRNSPLNT
- will provide a way for members to share information on such things as
- as travel, both domestic and abroad, how to deal with a compromised
- immune system, stories about transplant experiences, and anything
- that the members feel is worth discussing.
-
- Archives of TRNSPLNT postings can be listed by sending an
- INDEX TRNSPLNT
- command to LISTSERV@WUVMD.WUSTL.EDU.
-
- To subscribe, send the following command to LISTSERV@WUVMD.WUSTL.EDU
- via email:
-
- SUB TRNSPLNT Your Full Name
-
- where "Your Full Name" is your name. For example:
-
- SUB TRNSPLNT Billy Rubin
-
- Owner: Dan Flasar SYSFLASAR@WUGCRC.WUSTL.EDU
-
- A web page form is also available for subscribing at
- http://trnsplnt.tsx.org
-
- NOTE: This is NOT a medical forum! Though advice may be offered, you
- should, as with any medical issue, check with your physician before
- you accept anything said in this forum as a basis for doing anything
- that might affect your physical condition!
-
- DIALYSIS
- --------
- (from Julie <clarify@alum.mit.edu> )
-
- To subscribe to the list see http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dialysis_support/
- or email dialysis_support-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
-
- Chat groups
- -----------
-
- The Lung Transplantation Page Chat
- http://homestead.deja.com/user.lungtxpsych/index.html
-
- WEEKLY TRANSPLANT CHATS ONLINE
- From Kandy S. Florida <Kandysfl@AOL.COM>:
-
- Sunday, 9:00 PM ET, Organ Transplant Chat
- Talk City http://www.geocities.com/~rolo1/community.html
- Contact: gmreilly@snet.net
- Sunday, 10:00 PM ET, Kidney/Pancreas Transplant,
- AOL: Private Room aol://2719:2-2-kidney%20pancreas%20tx
- Contact: OhLarry922@aol.com
- Monday, 7 PM ET, Kidney/Pancreas Transplant Chat
- OTA: http://organtx.org/chatroom.htm
- Contact: CarolG@organtx.org
- Monday, 8:00 PM ET, Donor Awareness,
- AOL: allHealth, aol://2719:3-1453-Helping%20Hand%20Cafe
- Contact: BHostMich@aol.com or HOST AHTH Blu@aol.com
- Monday, 9:00 PM ET, Liver Disease & Transplant
- AOL: allHealth, aol://2719:3-691-Mutual%20Support%20Room
- Contact: HOST AHTH Kandy@aol.com or HOST AHTHLiv@aol.com
- Tuesday, 8:00 PM ET, Organ Transplantation & 2000 U.S. Transplant Games
- Team Minnesota http://www.sadiehawkins.com/gameschat.htm
- Contact: dick@sadiehawkins.com
- Tuesday, 9:00 PM ET, Carols lung tx room
- AOL: Private Room, aol://2719:2-2-Carols%20lung%20tx%20room
- Tuesday, 9:00 PM ET Bone Marrow Transplant
- AOL: Private Room, aol://2719:61-2-bmt%20support%20online
- Tuesday, 10:00 PM, Kidney Pancreas Transplant
- AOL: Private Room, aol://2719:2-2-kidney%20pancreas%20tx
- Contact: HSchrei686@aol.com
- Wednesday, 7:00 PM ET, All Organs & Tissues Transplant
- DrKoop: Communities: Health Central
- https://www.drkoop.com/_mem_bin/formslogin.asp?http://drkoop.com/community/cha
- t/chat.asp?room=healthcentral
- Wednesday, 9:00 PM ET, Liver Disease and Transplants
- OTA: http://organtx.org/chatroom.htm
- Contact: JamHil@aol.com
- Wednesday 10: 00 PM ET, Kidney/Pancreas Transplant Chat & ESRD
- AOL: allHealth, aol://2719:3-691-Mutual%20Support%20Room
- Contact: HOST AHTH Blu@aol.com or HOST AHTH KLIX@aol.com
- Thursday, 7:00 PM ET, Heart Transplant
- AOL: allHealth, aol://2719:3-193-Health%20Conference
- Contact: HOST AHTH Max
- Thursday, 8:00 PM ET, Organ Transplantation & 2000 U.S. Transplant Games
- Team Minnesota http://www.sadiehawkins.com/gameschat.htm
- Contact: dick@sadiehawkins.com
- Thursday, 9:00 PM ET Bone Marrow Transplant
- AOL: Private Room, aol://2719:61-2-bmt%20support%20online
- Thursday, 9:00 PM ET, Lung Transplant Chat
- SecondWind: http;//www.2ndwind.org/main.htm
- Contact: luckylungsforjo@aol.com
- Thursday, 10:00 PM ET, Children's Liver Chat
- Children's Liver Alliance http://www.livertx.org
- Contact: Livers4Kids@earthlink.net or call 718-987-6200.
- Friday, 8:00 PM ET, Kidney Disease & Transplant
- AOL: Private Room, aol://2719:2-2-Kidney
- Contact: BLUBFLY@aol.com
- Friday, 9:00 PM ET All Organs & Tissues Transplant
- AOL: allHealth, aol://2719:3-49-Positive%20Reflections
- Contact: HOST AHTH Kandy@aol.com or HOST AHTHLiv@aol.com
- Saturday, 7 PM ET, Dealing with End-Stage Disease and Death
- OTA: http://organtx.org/chatroom.htm
- Saturday 9:00 PM ET, Parents of Bone Marrow Tx Recipients
- AOL: Private Room: aol://2719:61-2-bmt%20support%20online
- Satuday 9:00 PM ET, Transplant Pre n Post Support Community
- Talk City: www.tpnp.org/community.html, #Transplant channel
- Contact: gmreilly@snet.net
-
- Caregivers Support Group
- ----------------------------
- From Evelyn Heering (ev48@aol.com):
- This list is for the spouses, family members and caregivers of lung
- disease patients, lung transplant recipients and of those waiting for
- lung tranpslants only. We are here to help each other cope with the
- waiting and the post transplant times as well. To subscribe to this list
- send your request to: ASSIST-request@HOME.EASE.LSOFT.COM Please include
- the diagnosis of your loved one, your relationship (spouse, parent,
- sibling, etc.) and whether the person has been transplanted or is waiting.
-
- Australian Transplant and Dialysis discussion list
- --------------------------------------------------
- RALPH NEWMAN <rnewman@tpgi.com.au>:
- Announcing the establishment of a new email listserver (actually
- Majordomo - Ed.) in Australia, open to all, set up for both Transplant
- and dialysis discussion. It is still a small group and we would welcome
- your input. It can be found on the web, where there is an automatic
- subscribe site, found at
- http://www.wagga.net.au/transplant
-
- Second Wind discussion list
- ---------------------------
- (see Second Wind National Lung Transplant Patient's Association web site
- in section II below http://www.2ndwind.org)
- Messages concerning lung diseases, lung transplants, problems, solutions, and
- life in general.
- Subscription form:
- http://www.2ndwind.org/join.htm
-
- Kidney/Pancreas Support Group
- -----------------------------
- Since dealing with the long term chronic condition and complications
- from years of Diabetes, still affects people after a transplant, we
- formed this group a few years ago to deal with those issues. Many
- people stay on both lists. We now have about 75 people participating in
- the KPTX group.
-
- To subscribe, Send a blank email to:
- kptx-subscribe@makelist.com
-
- If you have questions or problems, write to me at:
- alangluc@soca.com
-
- HTX, Heart and Lung Transplant Support Group
- --------------------------------------------
- Chris Molnar (StephenKyl@aol.com)
- HTX - An online mailing list for support and information sharing for families
- and individuals dealing with heart or heart-lung transplants due to
- childhood-onset heart disease. Subscribers facing the possibility of
- transplant or otherwise interested in the issues surrounding transplanted
- survivors of childhood-onset heart disease are also welcome.
- To subscribe:
- send email to: majordomo@tchin.org
- message: subscribe htx
-
- LiverSupport-L
- --------------
- from Ron Koestler [koestler@ix.netcom.com]
- LiverSupport-L@onelist.com. The list owner can be reached at
- LiverSupport-L-owner@onelist.com. People can subscribe by sending mail to
- LiverSupport-L-subscribe@onelist.com.
-
- The Organ Transplant Support Group Chat
- ---------------------------------------
- http://www.jensoft-cs.com/icqlist.html
- We encourage all members to get ICQ and provide us with their ICQ
- numbers. We will list the ICQ numbers of all members, allowing quick
- contact with members for anyone who may visit this page. ICQ empowers
- members with a means to chat whenever they like and enables them to share
- ideas, discuss similar interests or anything else.
-
- =========================================================================
- II. Selected organ and tissue transplant info via gopher and WWW
- =========================================================================
- There is no attempt here to make a comprehensive list of web resources
- for transplantation. Instead, the sites below are meant to provide some
- of the best resources for patients and the general public, with
- particular reference to information on organ donation.
-
- Gopher
- ------
- Yale Biomedical Gopher
- gopher://info.med.yale.edu/11/Disciplines/Disease/Transplant/
-
- Contents:
- Bone Marrow Transplant Information (U. Penn. Med. School)
- Gallup Poll on Attitudes Towards Organ Donation
- HRSA organ transplantation fact sheet
- Directory Issues of UNOS Update
- Legislative history of organ donation
- Live kidney donor information
- National Resource Directory for transplant patients (updated 3/94)
- Organ trafficking myths
- Critique of French film "Organ Snatchers"
- Organ trafficking myths
- Report to UN on Child Organ Trafficking Rumor
- UNOS paper on organ theft myths
- Organ transplants increase; donation shows little change
- Relevant articles from National Kidney Foundation Newsletter
- Religious and cultural views on donation
- Transplant ethics
- Transplant fund raising (from BMT Newsletter, 11/93)
- UNOS Brochures
- Xenograft transplantation: "The Transplant Gap"
-
- World Wide Web
- --------------
-
- American Liver Foundation disease information brochures
- -------------------------------------------------------
- http://www.gastro.com/liverpg/livdz.htm
-
- American Share Foundation WWW page
- ----------------------------------
- http://www.asf.org
- maintainer: jsabbott@ix.netcom.com (JOHN S. ABBOTT)
- Partial list of contents:
- Kid's Space=20
- 1995 Transplant Desk Reference
- Questions a Patient Should Ask
- Answers to Commonly Asked Transplant Questions
- What Every Patient Needs to Know about UNOS
- Transplant Centers
- OPOs - Organ Procurement Organizations
-
- The American Society of Transplant Physicians
- ---------------------------------------------
- http://www.astp.org/
- ASTP is a multidisciplinary group of physicians and scientists dedicated
- to the promotion of education and research relating to transplantation
- medicine and immunology. News and abstracts of the journal
- "Transplantation" available.
-
- Biliary Atresia & Liver Transplant Network
- ------------------------------------------
- http://www.asf.org/balt.html
- (see Part 3, section IIe)
-
- BODY British Organ Donor Society
- --------------------------------
- http://www.argonet.co.uk/body/index.html
- This site covers topics on organ donation and transplantation, both in
- the UK and Worldwide. Your requests for topics you would like to see
- included are welcomed. Please send them to body@argonet.co.uk
-
- Coalition on Donation
- ---------------------
- http://www.shareyourlife.org/
- Slick web page with donor education and myths information.
- "The Coalition on Donation is a not-for-profit alliance of local
- coalitions and national organizations who have joined forces to promote
- organ and tissue donation. The Coalition has created national
- education/action campaigns for distribution by our 50 local coalition
- affiliates."
-
- The Delaware Transplant Program (DVTP)
- --------------------------------------
- http://clever.net/wwwmall/dvtp/index.html
-
- The Delaware Valley Transplant Program is the non-profit organ tissue
- donor program serving hospitals and patients in the eastern half of
- Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and the state of Delaware. Founded in
- 1974, DVTP is one of the federally designated organ procurement
- organizations in the U.S. The program coordinates the recovery and
- allocation of organs and tissues for transplant and is a part of the
- nation's organ procurement and sharing network. DVTP is also the primary
- source for donor cards in the region and conducts hundreds of community
- and professional education programs each year.
-
- Donor Network of Arizona
- ------------------------
- http://www.donor-network.org/dnet/
- We are located in downtown Phoenix, Arizona
- 3877 N. 7th Street, Suite #200
- Phoenix, Arizona 85014
- (602)222-2200
- 1-800-94-DONOR
- -Organ Donation for Transplant and Research
- -Donation of Bones and Tissues for Transplant and Research
- -Eye Donation and Corneal Transplant
- -Public Education (General Donation & Transplant Information)
- -DNA'S Vital Link (A Quarterly Publication)
- -DNA'S Legislative Update
-
- The Friends' Health Connection
- ------------------------------
- http://www.48friend.com
- The Friends' Health Connection is a non-profit organization and the
- premiere organization that provides customized, one-to-one support for
- individuals and/or their families with health-related problems. We now
- have a national toll-free phone line that you can call Monday through
- Friday, 9:00 AM-5:00 PM to speak directly with a representative from our
- organization. It is 1-800/48-FRIEND or 1-800/483-7436.
- e-mail: fhc@pilot.njin.net
-
- Gift of Life Trust Fund of South Carolina
- -----------------------------------------
- http://www.giftoflife-sc.org/
- Site includes information on organ donation, support groups and programs
- for transplant patients, patient stories, and links to other information
- sites.
-
- HCFA, The MEDICARE and MEDICAID Agency
- --------------------------------------
- http://www.hcfa.gov
- Health care financing news, Information about the Medicare Program, etc.
-
- HHS organ donation information
- ------------------------------
- http://organdonor.gov/
- Wide array of information on organ donation and organ donor education.
- Current statistics. National Donor Sabbath information. Donor card.
-
- HHS/HRSA Solid Organ Transplantation Information
- ------------------------------------------------
- http://www.hrsa.dhhs.gov/osp/dot/solid.htm
-
- Technical Data - Includes statistics on the Waiting List, Number of
- Organs Recovered and Transplanted, Survival Rates, etc.
- Fact Sheets
- Glossary of Terms
- Commonly Asked Questions about Organ Donation - Includes excerpts from
- Questions & Answers about Organ Donation, as well as links to Steps
- Involved in Donation and Transplantation, How are Recipients Matched to
- Donor Organs, and Why Should Minorities be Particularly Concerned about
- Organ Donation?
- History of the OPTN and Scientific Registry - Includes summarized organ
- allocation policies, Scientific Registry information, and a brief history
- of UNOS and its role in the OPTN and Scientific Registry.
- Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) by State
- List of UNOS Member Transplant Programs by State
-
- Life Connections of Ohio
- ------------------------
- http://www.mco.edu/hosp/lifeconn
- Contains excellent information on donation and transplantation, as well
- as extensive answers to frequently asked questions about donation.
- Mission
- Life Connection of Ohio is dedicated to increasing and facilitating the
- recovery of high quality organs and tissues for transplantation.
-
- London Health Sciences Centre Multi-Organ Transplant Program
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Has several informative articles on organ donation and transplant
- information, with references.
- http://www.lhsc.on.ca/transplant/index.htm
-
- Missouri Kidney Program
- -----------------------
- Contact person: David Patterson <mokpdave@muccmail.missouri.edu>
- http://www.missouri.edu:80/~mokpwww
- The Missouri Kidney Program in Columbia Missouri (MoKP). We are
- developing an End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) and related issues web site
- for patients, providers and others who are interested.
- Currently our web site houses our most recent annual report detailing who
- MoKP is as well as some statistics about patients in Missouri. We also
- maintain to links to other related areas.
-
- National Donor Sabbath Resource Kit 1997
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- http://www.transplantawareness.org/sabbath/CONTENTS.html
- Jennifer Grant at the HHS Division of Transplantation has assembled
- opinions from all religious organizations in the US regarding organ
- donaiton, and give suggestions of how congregations can participate in
- the National Donor Sabbath (Nov. 13-15, 1998).
-
- NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR RARE DISORDERS (NORD),INC.
- ----------------------------------------------------
- http://www.pcnet.com/~orphan/
- This organization manages a drug cost share program for individuals who
- cannot afford Sandimmune (cyclosporine). See Part 3, section I.
-
- National Transplant Assistance Fund
- -----------------------------------
- http://www.LibertyNet.org/~txFund
- Formerly National Heart Assist and Transplant Fund
- e-mail: txFund@LibertyNet.org
- VOICE 800-642-8399 / Fax 610-527-5210
-
- National Transplant Assistance Fund is dedicated to providing financial,
- social and emotional support to transplant candidates. NTAF counsels patients
- regarding location and cost of transplant centers and other possible sources
- of financial assistance. NTAF helps the patients' families organize
- fundraising in their communities while assuring fiscal accountability as
- trustee. The organization is also deeply committed to educating the public
- about the critical need for organ donation, lecturing community groups on
- organ donor awareness and distributing free organ donor materials upon
- request.
-
- New England Organ Bank
- ----------------------
- One Gateway Center
- Newton, MA 02158
- 800/446-6362
- Contact address: info@neob.com
- http://www.ultranet.com/~neob/index.html
- Very nice on-line donor card available.
- Information on donation and transplantation
- Organ and Tissue Donation
- Transplantation
- Attitudes toward organ and tissue donation
- Deciding on organ and tissue donation
- The Gift of Life!
- Information on becoming and organ and tissue donor
- Print a donor card to sign. Tell your family.
- We will send you information. Just fill out this form.
- Information for Donor Families and Recipients
- NEOB Donor Family Services
- Donor Family Quilt
- Corresponding with donor families and recipients
-
- Novartis Pharma (formerly Sandoz) Transplant Square
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- http://www.transplantsquare.com/index.htm
- Just as the town square used to be the central meeting place where people
- exchanged information and ideas, the Transplant Square from Novartis Pharma
- Ltd. is being offered on the Internet as a service to the wordwide transplant
- community -- patients, healthcare professionals, support networks, and other
- interested audiences. We are committed to advancing the science of transplant
- medicine, and to providing you with up-to-date information in the field of
- transplantation.
-
- Organ Transplant Association
- ----------------------------
- http://organtx.org/
- A web site organized by patients, families, and volunteers for the purpose
- of providing resources and support over the Internet. Contains the
- archives Kandy Darroch's "Medical Meanderings" newsletter. Medical
- Meanderings contains informative articles on transplantation topics. The
- site also contains a list of organizations providing financial support, or
- counseling, to transplant patients, a well maintained list of transplant
- related chat groups, information on laptop lending to patients in the
- hospital, and other useful resources.
-
-
- Organ Transplant Patient Home Page
- ----------------------------------
- http://www.hooked.net/users/chartsf/txp/txphome.htm#chrono
- Carl Hart <chartsf@hooked.net>:
- There are numerous sites with transplant information; some pages are
- dedicated to health care practitioners, others to patients and their
- families. However, I found the information to be piecemeal, in no
- logical order. I began to think back to my own experience with my
- father's heart transplant: What information could I have used, and when
- could have I used it? Thus, I recognized that one way to present this
- information logically was to present it in a chronologically based Table
- of Contents:
- after the shock of the diagnosis and prognosis;
- becoming informed about the procedure;
- determining where the transplant may take place;
- qualifying for the treatment (i.e., meeting the medical and
- insurance/financial criteria);
- entering the transplant program;
- undergoing the transplant procedure; and,
- complying with the aftercare instructions and addressing complications.
-
- The Partnership for Organ Donation
- ----------------------------------
- http://www.transweb.org/partnership/index.html
-
- The Partnership is an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to
- saving and improving lives by closing the gap between the number of organ
- transplants that are possible and the number of organ transplants that
- actually occur.
- If you would like more information about us and the work we are doing to
- help solve the organ donor shortage, please contact us at
- info@organ-donation.org or call (617) 482-5746.
- Contents:
- How the Partnership Fulfills Its Mission
- Progress Notes: The Partnership's newsletter
- Progress Notes Archive
- Public education: A Different Kind of Love Letter and the Gallup Survey
- A brief history of The Partnership for Organ Donation
- A list of our Board members and Advisory Board members
- Recent press releases
- The Partnership's Bibliography
- The Partnership for Organ Donation Scientific Abstracts (accepted)
- Job opportunities (when available)
- Sponsors
-
- Renalnet Home Page
- ------------------
- http://ns.gamewood.net//renalnet.html
- Partial contents:
- Dialysis Clinical Information
- ESRD Program Financing
- ESRD Providers
- ESRD Vendors and Manufacturers
- Government & Education Healthcare Resources
- Nephrology Professional Organizations
- Nephrology Research Presentations
- Organ Transplantation
- Featured General Healthcare Resources
-
- Second Wind National Lung Transplant Patient's Association
- -----------------------------------------------------
- http://www.2ndwind.org
- A Network of General Information and Support For both pre and post lung
- transplant patients and their families.
- -Members Network E-Mail Address Listings
- -Financing Transplantation
- -Members Stories & Letters
- -Information on Specific Lung Transplant Related Diseases
- -Member profiles E-mail Addresses ,homepage links
- -"AirWays" Newsletter
- -Articles & Items of interest
- -Nutrition Center
- -Organ Donation Information
-
- Stadtlanders' Pharmacy
- ----------------------
- http://www.stadtlander.com
- Transplant National Resource Directory
- Article Archives: These articles have been adapted from Stadtlanders'
- magazine.
-
- Surviving Transplantation
- -------------------------
- Dr. John Craven <jcraven@julian.uwo.ca>:
- Surviving Transplantation is intended as a guide to coping for persons
- undertaking major organ transplant. Any ideas contained within this book
- should be considered in the context of your personal health
- circumstances. As you will read in several places in Surviving
- Transplantation, we recommend that you consult a physician or another
- health professional before undertaking to make any changes in your
- personal health care.
- http://www.stjosephs.london.on.ca/SJHC/programs/mental/survive/st.htm
-
- Transplant Awareness Inc.
- -------------------------
- Transplant Awareness Inc. sells T-shirts, car license plate frames, pins,
- and other items, which have slogans that promote organ and tissue
- donation. TAI is a nonprofit corporation run and operated by volunteers
- who are all organ transplant recipients. Our objective is to market
- products that will promote organ donation by increasing awareness among
- the general population. It is our hope that TAI's efforts will result in
- more organs being donated and more lives being saved and prolonged in the
- manner that our lives were. Since we are all non-paid volunteers, 100% of
- the profit from the sale of our merchandise goes to increasing organ and
- tissue transplantation awareness. We thank our donors for the lives we
- can now live and we thank you for your patronage of our efforts.
- Wide variety of donation and patient resources listed under "Other
- Transplant Resources "
- http://www.transplantawareness.org/
-
- Transplanthealth.com
- --------------------
- http://www.transplanthealth.com
- is an educational Web site that offers transplantation information,
- message boards, and interactive features for kidney, liver, and other organ
- recipients and donors. Features patient education information, a message
- board, and information links. On-line registration required.
-
- Transplantweek
- --------------
- http://www.transplantweek.org
- Latest news about transplanation.
- The Transplant Week online newsletter, presenting the latest news and views
- on developments in transplantation, is one of a family of specialized
- medical newsletters brought to you by Medical Week, LLC
-
- TransWeb
- --------
- TransWeb is a world wide web page for sharing information on organ
- donation and transplantation. The page is continuously seeking
- contributions of new material, as well as ideas for making it a more
- useful forum for the transplantation community. TransWeb can be
- found at
- http://www.transweb.org
- and suggestions and contributions can be sent to
- transplant.webmaster@umich.edu
-
- Partial list of contents:
- Focus on Transplant Patients
- Ask TransWeb
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Experiences with Transplantation and Donation
- Transplant Medications
- New Developments in Transplantation
- Policy and Legislative Updates
- Support, Advocacy, and Educational Groups & Resources
- The Transplant Memorial
- Reading List, Articles, Videos, etc.
-
- Information for Medical Professionals
- New Developments in Transplantation
- Political/Legislative Updates
- Ask TransWeb
- Cybercongress: Transplantation in the Next Millennium
- Congress on Xenotransplantation
- UNOS's Calendar of Events
-
- Organ and Tissue Donation: A Gift of Life
- Test Your Knowledge of Organ Donation! The Donation Quiz
- Frequently Asked Questions:
- Top Ten Misconceptions about Donation
- Can well-connected people like Mickey Mantle get transplants faster?
- How many people need organs? See also thewaiting list statistics at
- UNOS.
- Does my religion approve of donation?
- What kinds of tissue can be donated?
- What do I do if I want to donate?
- Can I donate NOW?
- Where can I register to be a bone marrow donor?
- Articles About Donation:
- The Tissue Shortage
- From Oncolink: Measures to Safeguard Human Tissue Transplants
- Experiences With Donation:
- Feelings of a Living Kidney Donor
- A bone marrow donor's experience
- A special thank-you letter
- "The Gift That Lives On"
- Promoting Donation:
- The Wendy Marx Foundation
- The Transplant Memorial
-
- Transplantation Resources on the Internet
- (A comprehensive list of links for related sites on the net.)
-
- Transplant News
- ----------------
- http://www.trannews.com/
- The only independent newsletter offering timely news on Organ, Tissue,
- Eye and Bone Marrow Procurement and Transplantation. Find out how to
- receive a FREE copy of the Transplant Video Journal.
-
- TRIO (Transplant Recipients International Organization, Inc.)
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- http://www.primenet.com/~trio/
- TRIO is a major transplant patient support, and government lobbying,
- organization. This site offers recipient and donor family support.
- Large available publications list.
- Current news. Local chapter information. Email: trio@primenet.com
-
- UCLA Transplantation
- --------------------
- http://www.medctr.ucla.edu/dept/xplant/default.htm
- So far available is a description and statistics of the Dumont-UCLA
- Transplant Center. Other things under construction:
- Abstracts not Currently under Copyright
- A Moderated Newsgroup on Issues in Liver Transplantation
- Static and Video Images of Procedures
- Slide Show Presentations
-
- University of Colorado's Organ Transplant Web Page
- --------------------------------------------------
- http://www.uchsc.edu/ctrsinst/organtx/
-
-
- UNOS Transplantation Information Site
- -------------------------------------
- (See also section VII for more information on UNOS.)
- http://www.unos.org
-
- UNOS is a non-profit organization responsible for promoting,
- facilitating, and scientifically advancing organ procurement and
- transplantation throughout the United States while administering a
- national organ allocation system based on scientific and medical factors
- and practices.
- Issues of the very informative news magazine UNOS Update have begun to be
- posted.
- The site also has up-to-date transplant statistics, resources available,
- and calls for public comment on policy changes.
-
- World Children's Transplant Fund
- --------------------------------
- http://www.wctf.org/
- The World Children's Transplant Fund (WCTF) is a unique and special
- organization. Our mission is to provide as many opportunities as possible
- for lifesaving pediatric transplant surgery to children of the world. Our
- goal is to assist nations in developing and then sustaining independent
- pediatric organ transplant programs. Coordinating and sharing of our
- medical resources enables children of lesser developed countries access to
- the chance which children of the United States routinely have...the chance
- for life. The Strategy of the World Children's Transplant Fund focuses on
- developing World Children's Transplant Centers attached to preexisting
- medical facilities in each of the selected site locations.
- World Children's Transplant Fund
- 16000 Ventura Blvd.
- Suite 103
- Encino, California 91436
- Phone: (818) 905-9283
- Fax: (818) 905-9315
- E-Mail to: info@wctf.org
-
- =========================================================================
- III. Organ donation and transplantation, frequently asked questions
- =========================================================================
-
- contributed by Alex Bost, alex@unx.sas.com
-
- *** Commonly Asked Questions About Being an Organ Donor:
-
- - Where can I get an Organ Donor Card?
-
- Many organizations, including the NKF and AAKP will provide donor
- cards free of charge. Many physicians, pharmacies, and hospitals will
- also provide them.
- [Free cards and pamphlets also available from (800)24-DONOR]
-
- - Should I mention being an Organ Donor in my Will?
-
- No. Your will may be read too late to take your organs. However,
- you should definitely mention Organ Donation in your Living Will.
-
- - What is a Living Will?
-
- A Living Will is a document where you stipulate what kind of medical
- attention you will receive if you are unable to make decisions for
- yourself. You may state your wish to become an organ donor in a Living
- Will.
-
- - Who pays for the medical costs of being a donor?
-
- The transplant recipient is responsible for all costs involved in
- organ procurement. The donor's family will not pay any of the cost.
-
- - Does organ donation disrupt funeral arangements?
-
- No. Organ donation will not disfigure the body. A donor may still
- have an "open casket" funeral.
-
- - Will becoming a donor mean a doctor will let me die?
-
- Absolutely not! Medical personnel must follow very strict guidelines
- before a donor can be pronounced dead. You can expect the same quality
- of health care as you would if you weren't a donor.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- The following was written by Anne Treffeisen of the Long Island Chapter
- of TRIO (Transplant Recipients International Organization)
- (516-421-3258). The last week of April is National Organ
- and Tissue Donor Awareness Week (NOTDAW). She asks that pastors or
- rabbis include mention of the gift of life in their sermon or bulletin
- during this week and provides this message as a guide.
-
- ORGAN DONATION AND TRANSPLANTATION FACT SHEET
-
- The donation of organs is a unique opportunity to save lives. It is
- possible for the organs, tissues, and corneas of a single donor to save
- or help as many as 25 people.
-
- Transplantation works. As of 1993, over 160 thousand people have been
- transplanted, and the majority are living full productive lives more than
- five years after surgery.
-
- Over 28,000 people in the United States, many of them children under 10
- years of age, are currently waiting for transplants, and someone is added
- to the waiting list every 30 minutes. Many will die waiting.
-
- All potential recipients are listed on the United Network for Organ
- Sharing, UNOS, computer. Organs are assigned as they become available
- considering the severity of a patient's condition, medical requirements
- (such as blood type, size, and tissue match), proximity to the available
- organ, and time on the waiting list.
-
- More organ donors are needed. Only about 20% of the potential donors
- actually have their organs donated.
-
- Organ donors are healthy people who have died suddenly, usually through
- accident or head injury. They are brain dead. The organs are kept alive
- through mechanical means.
-
- No one involved with the life saving care of an individual is involved in
- the transplantation or organ recovery process. No one on the transplant
- team has any role in the diagnosis, treatment or declaration of death of
- a patient.
-
- Organs for transplant must be made available soon after death. Organ
- removal will not take place without the permission of the next of kin.
- Therefore, the decision to donate should have been discussed earlier and
- the next of kin should understand and be prepared to carry out their
- loved one's wishes. This is the heart of DONOR AWARENESS.
-
- There is no cost or payment to the donor family or estate. All normal
- funeral arrangements are possible.
-
- All religious groups approve of organ and tissue donation as charitable
- acts toward one's fellow human beings.
-
- Organ donation is a true gift. In general, the donor family will never
- know the recipient. They do know that out of their tragic loss, they
- have given others life and health.
-
- Questions frequently asked by transplant patients:
- --------------------------------------------------
- (see also UNOS pamphlets in Yale biomed gopher, information in TransWeb,
- American Share Foundation WWW site, section II)
-
- Contributed by Joel Newman <newmanjd@UNOS.ORG>, UNOS Manager of Corporate
- Communications
-
- *What's my position on the list?
-
- Candidates and donors are matched by data, not rank. The only thing
- you could be "ranked" by, in theory, is your waiting time. You could
- be #1 on your local list by waiting time, having waited longer than
- everyone else. However, if you're blood type B and a type A organ
- comes along, you'd automatically be excluded. The same is true for
- organ size, tissue match, etc. Given that all donors and all
- candidates differ in some respects, you could be 20th on the list for
- one offer, 3rd for the next, then 57th, then 1st.
-
- Even if you're at the "top of the list," you may not get the organ.
- Perhaps you have a complication that would preclude getting a
- transplant for a few days or weeks. Maybe in reviewing the lab work
- or donor history the transplant team has cause to defer the offer.
- Perhaps, if you're highly sensitized, the initial crossmatch is OK but
- the final crossmatch comes back bad. There are lots of scenarios.
- Any refusals and the explanations would be submitted to UNOS.
-
- Organs other than kidneys are most often transplanted into one of the
- first 10 candidates identified on the match run. For kidneys that
- rate is much lower, particularly because of highly sensitized patients
- with adverse crossmatches.
-
- With specific, written permission from the patient and from the
- listing center, UNOS can provide the basic information on patient
- listing (date of entry, current medical status, etc.). But I'd *beg*
- you to call the center first on this if you have any questions! And
- again, for all the reasons above, this would be meaningless as an
- expression of your "rank" for a transplant.
-
- For more detail:
- http://www.med.umich.edu:80/trans/transweb/faq/faq_pos_list.html
-
-
- *Where is the best transplant center?
-
- We (UNOS) maintain(s) data on center-specific graft and patient
- survival. The current report covers all transplants occurring between
- 10/1/87 and 12/31/91. You can request data free on up to 10 transplant
- programs; after that we recommend you purchase either the set of data or
- the specific volume you need. I believe the entire report is also
- available via ftp on some obscure HCFA site; even I don't know the
- address. (I'd warn you, though -- it's a huge report.)
-
- That report will tell you quite a bit, but there's a lot it can't. There
- are some risk factors we're unable to quantify at this point but might
- affect outcome. There is also pure chance, which we can never completely
- eliminate. For example, a recipient with a perfectly functioning
- transplant who gets run over by a truck is still counted as a death,
- graft-related or not.
-
- The numbers can never tell you the whole story, either. I think any
- surgeon or physician would tell you that the patient's outlook and
- attitude have a great effect on outcome. If you really like (or
- really hate) the care you're getting, the numbers have less meaning.
-
- I'd advise you to look at the numbers, get some recommendations from
- people in similar need, and then talk to the people at the program(s).
-
-
- ==========================================================================
- IV. The organ donor shortage
- ==========================================================================
-
- UNOS statistics reveal that in 1993, on average, 8 people a day died in
- the US while on the waiting list. As organ transplantation has passed
- out of the experimental stage, the number of people with end stage
- diseases seeking a transplant has slowly but steadily increased. The
- number of donations however, has not increased. Sadly, this is not
- because there are not more potential donors. Various estimates are that
- anywhere from 60 to 70% of potential donations are either refused by the
- next-of-kin or are never requested. These estimates take into account
- the criteria for brain-dead, heart-beating donors and other
- contraindications. Roughly half of the missed donations appear to result
- from failure of physicians to either declare brain death in a timely
- manner, or their failure to notify their Organ Procurement Organization
- of potential donors. This is despite enactment in all 50 states of
- "required request" legislation that mandates that all potential donations
- be sought. Apparently, there is no enforcement of these laws.
-
- There are a variety of proposals to increase the number of
- donations. For example: public and professional education, giving
- people who have registered their support for donation additional
- points on the waiting list should they ever need a transplant
- themselves (preferred status), changing the structure of donation
- from a required opting-in to a required opting-out strategy
- (presumed consent), and requiring all adults to register their
- choice of whether they would permit donation in the event of their
- death (mandated choice or required response).
-
- There are also, on occasion, issues raised in the media that might
- be of interest to medical ethicists, but which would have little to
- no positive impact on the number of organs available for
- transplantation. Organ donation from anencephalic infants and
- executed convicts, for example, are issues that could possibly
- distract attention from the more important issue of obtaining wide
- spread support for donation.
-
- In the 1994 September 14th issue of JAMA, the AMA has finally (after
- nearly a year of delay after the policy's adoption) made public its
- recommendation that states enact into law a mandated choice policy.
- The length of time it has taken to make this policy public indicates
- the medical community's inability to appreciate that this is a
- crisis situation for those patients on the waiting list whose lives
- could potentially be saved. It also indicates that there are
- individuals who do recognize the seriousness of the situation and
- are working to move their colleagues toward a feasible solution.
-
- References:
-
- Siminoff LA, Arnold RM, Caplan AL, Virnig BA, Seltzer DL
- Public Policy Governing Organ and Tissue Procurement in the United
- States, Results from the National Organ and Tissue Procurement Study
- Ann. Intern. Med. 1995 July 1;123:10-17
- Note: Some of the conclusions in this study are at odds with those of
- studies conducted by The Partnership for Organ Donation.
-
- Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, American Medical Association
- Strategies for Cadaveric Organ Procurement.
- JAMA 1994 Sept.14;272(10):809-12
-
- Murray TH, Youngner SJ
- Organ Salvage Policies, A Need for Better Data and More Insightful
- Ethics. (editorial)
- JAMA 1994 Sept.14;272(10):814-5
-
- Wolf JS
- The role of the United Network for Organ Sharing and designated
- organ procurement organizations in organ retrieval for transplantation.
- Arch Pathol Lab Med 1991 Mar;115(3):246-9
-
- Prottas J Batten HL
- Health professionals and hospital administrators in organ
- procurement: attitudes, reservations, and their resolutions.
- Am J Public Health 1988 Jun;78(6):642-5
-
- Annas GJ
- The paradoxes of organ transplantation [editorial]
- Am J Public Health 1988 Jun;78(6):621-2
-
- Evans RW Orians CE Ascher NL
- The potential supply of organ donors. An assessment of the efficacy
- of organ procurement efforts in the United States.
- JAMA 1992 Jan 8;267(2):239-46
-
- Spital A
- Mandated choice. The preferred solution to the organ shortage?
- Arch Intern Med 1992 Dec;152(12):2421-4
- Mandated Choice for Organ Donation: Time To Give It a Try
- MD Annals of Internal Medicine, 1 July 1996. 125:66-69.
- http://www.acponline.org/journals/annals/01jul96/inbalan1.htm
-
- Gnant, M.R.X., et al.,
- The impact of the presumed consent law and a decentralized organ
- procurement system on organ donation: quadruplication in the number
- of organ donors. (1991) Transplantation Proceedings, 23(5):2685-2686.
-
- Michielson, P.
- Organ shortage-What to do? [Presumed consent in Belgium] (1992)
- Transplantation Proceedings, 24(6):2391-2392.
-
- Kott, Andrea., Organ Procurement Programs in State of Emergency.
- Medical World News Feb 1992, v33n2, p. 15-16
-
- Lee, P.P., Kissner, P., Organ donation and the Uniform Anatomical
- Gift Act. (1986) Surgery 100:867-875.
-
- "Solving the Organ Donor Shortage", The Partnership for Organ Donation,
- Inc. (617)482-5746.
-
- UNOS Ethics Committee Reports on alternatives for organ donation:
- "Financial Incentives for Organ Donation"
- "Preferred Status for Organ Donors"
- "An Evaluation of the Ethics of Presumed Consent and a Proposal Based on
- Required Response"
- - available from UNOS (804)330-8500
- - also available through the Yale biomedical gopher (see section II)
-
- Gallup Poll on Attitudes Towards Organ Donation, available in the Yale
- biomedical gopher and Transweb (see section II), and from The Partnership
- for Organ Donation, Inc. (617)482-5746.
-
- National Donor Sabbath web site
- --------------------------------
- This site contains a wealth of information regarding the positions of
- many Judeo-Christian religious organizations toward organ donation.
- Organizations' recent position statements, and suggestions to clergy
- for participating in National Donor Sabbath Day, or presented.
- From Douglas Y. Sur - doug.sur@bigfoot.com:
- National Sabbath Day is coming and has been constructed to help
- religous organizations help the transplant community.
- For those interested in National Donor Sabbath Day, please contact
- Jennifer Grant at 301-443-7577. I tried putting up some information
- regarding the subject at
- http://www.transplantawareness.org/sabbath/CONTENTS.html
-
- ==========================================================================
- V. Transplant and organ donation myths
- ==========================================================================
-
- As with any new technology, rumors, myths and misunderstandings about
- organ transplantation are widespread. Frustration produced by the high
- cost, the effect of the organ donor shortage, and the unavailability of
- transplantation throughout most of the rest of the world have probably
- contributed to this. Since rumors can often be more entertaining than
- the truth, tabloid media will often pick up and help spread them, despite
- the great harm they cause. Urban legends about organ transplantation are
- uniquely dangerous since organ transplantation can not succeed without
- the participation and support of the majority of the population. Bad
- press, urban legends, even fiction portraying organ transplantation as
- somehow evil, all have prevented full support for donation and led to the
- death of people who might otherwise be leading productive and happy lives
- now.
-
- Another factor fueling the proliferation of myths is the unfortunate
- institution in India of payment for unrelated live kidney donation that
- preys on the poor in that country. While it may be true that the Indian
- medical community is not required to abide by western standards of
- ethics, neither is the US medical community required to interact with
- them, train their physicians, publish their research, etc. Its past time
- that the US medical community started taking visible responsibility for
- influencing transplantation ethics in foreign countries.
-
- Mani, M.K., Renal Transplantation in India. (1992) Transplantation
- Proceedings, 24:1828-9.
-
- Kott, Andrea., Organ Procurement Programs in State of Emergency.
- Medical World News Feb 1992, v33n2, p. 15-16
-
- Gallup Poll on Attitudes Towards Organ Donation, available at
- http://www.med.umich.edu:80/trans/transweb/gallup_survey/gallup_index.html
- and from The Partnership
- for Organ Donation, Inc. (617)482-5746.
-
- UNOS web site's Top Ten Myths About Donation
- http://www.unos.org/Newsroom/Frame_news.asp?SubCat=myth
-
- The "rising from brain death" myth
- ----------------------------------
-
- One of the requirements for solid organ donation from cadavers is
- that blood remain circulating for a number of hours. This requires
- a patient that has been declared brain dead, total loss of brain
- stem function, but whose heart can be kept beating. Unfortunately,
- the media, and even, apparently, some medical professionals, are in
- the habit of using the term "brain dead" to describe other
- conditions that are properly referred to as vegetative state and
- coma. A patient can recover, to one degree or another, from a
- vegetative state or a coma. As a result, when next of kin are
- approached with a request for organ donation after being told that
- the patient is brain dead they often mistakenly believe that the
- patient might recover and insist on waiting till the heart has
- stopped beating and the patient is no longer a candidate for
- donation.
-
- Myths are widely circulated of patients declared brain dead who
- recover just as they are about to be used for organ donation. This
- has never happened. Inaccurate use of terms has probably
- contributed to myths of resurrection from brain death, but the
- linkage to organ donation is simply malicious.
-
- An extremely informative article about the confusion surrounding brain death
- is at http://www.pitt.edu/~cep/41-3.html. It's extremely important that
- everyone concerned about organ donation understands this issue. Medical
- professionals themselves are guilty of perpetuating misunderstandings and
- myths about brain death and organ procurement. This may be the single most
- significant factor working against organ donation.
-
- The Partnership for Organ Donation (see section II and Part 2, section
- II), a nonprofit organization active in altering the way donation
- requests are made, is urging professionals to avoid the use of the term
- "brain death" when discussing the declaration of death with the family
- since its unrealistic to expect that the term can be explained to them,
- and misinformation corrected, while they are grieving.
-
- Freeman JW
- Confusion and misunderstanding of some of the terms and practices
- readily employed in medicine [editorial]
- S D J Med 1991 May;44(5):123
-
- Pallis C
- ABC of brain stem death. The position in the USA and elsewhere.
- Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1983 Jan 15;286(6360):209-10
-
- Young B Blume W Lynch A
- Brain death and the persistent vegetative state: similarities and
- contrasts.
- Can J Neurol Sci 1989 Nov;16(4):388-93
-
- Oboler SK
- Brain death and persistent vegetative states.
- Clin Geriatr Med 1986 Aug;2(3):547-76
-
- Let's Abolish "Brain-Death", Community Ethics / Volume 4, Number 1,
- http://www.pitt.edu/~cep/41-3.html
-
- The black market myth:
- ----------------------
-
- In all the time that the rumors of a black market, kidnapping and
- murder of children, organ-swiping, and other atrocities have been
- circulating (since at least 1982 when cyclosporin began to be widely
- used), there has never been any evidence to substantiate any of
- them.
-
- Any rumor regarding a black market in organs, or organ piracy, needs
- to be evaluated in light of the necessity of matching the organ and
- recipient in order to avoid rejection by the recipient's immune
- system. One can not take any old organ and just put it anywhere
- you please. A rather complex system has been set up in the US to
- handle matching and distribution. Its unlikely that any number of
- evil people in the US or abroad will be able to duplicate such a
- system in secret. Adding these simple facts with the necessity of
- having many highly skilled medical professionals involved, along
- with modern medical facilities and support, makes it plain why
- rumors of the involvement of murder, violence and organized crime in
- organ procurement can not be given any credence.
-
- These stories have done great damage to the public's appreciation of
- the need for organ donation.
-
- Within the last several years, human rights organizations have
- started to pick up and spread black market myths. They seem to have
- confused unethical practices abroad which have been known and
- protested for years (India's payment system for live kidney donation
- and China's use of organs from executed convicts) with implausible
- stories of secret organ swiping mafias. Their reliance on
- ill-informed sources of information has damaged appreciation for
- real human rights and ethics problems related to transplantation in
- Asia and developing countries.
-
- For reference see:
- "THE CHILD ORGAN TRAFFICKING RUMOR: A MODERN `URBAN LEGEND'"
- A REPORT SUBMITTED TO THE UNITED NATIONS SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE
- SALE OF CHILDREN, CHILD PROSTITUTION, AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY BY THE
- UNITED STATES INFORMATION AGENCY, by Todd Leventhal, USIA Senior
- Policy Officer,
- http://www.usia.gov/topical/global/baby.htm
-
- Debunking the Kidney Heist Hoax
- http://www.unos.org/Newsroom/archive_statement_022197.htm
-
- The New Orleans Police Department has put their Official Statement
- online at
- http://www.mardigrasday.com/police1.html
- regarding the persistant urban legend of kidney snatching.
-
- The Latin American baby snatching myth
- --------------------------------------
-
- These myths have been traced back to at least 1986 when Pravda in
- the Soviet Union carried allegations of children being taken to the
- US for adoption and then being murdered for their organs. There are
- several variations and they've become quite popular in countries
- where the civil unrest they foster tends to favor one political or
- military faction. As described above, all of them require an
- ignorance of what's involved in transplantation. No evidence is
- ever produced, just the assertion that its being investigated.
-
- Within the last few years some individuals concerned about human
- rights violations in Latin-America have become infatuated with these
- rumors, apparently because one Central-American government official
- or another had told them that they were true, though again no
- evidence is produced. This is very unfortunate since Amnesty
- International has started to quote some of the more irresponsible
- writings on the subject.
-
- Further information is available from Todd Leventhal at the US
- Information Agency. E-mail: tleventh@usia.gov Phone: (202)619-5673.
- Fax: (202)205-0655.
- They've been following the body parts rumors for seven years.
-
- References and additional information:
-
- Too Good to Check, Anti-Americanism: A rise in suspect reports that
- children are being abducted or their organs. Newsweek, June 26, 1995,
- pg. 33.
- (The international issue had a longer article on the same subject
- http://www.concentric.net/~Holloway/toogood.txt)
-
- Leventhal, THE "BABY PARTS" MYTH: THE ANATOMY OF A RUMOR. UNOS
- Update, May 1994 (also available from Todd Leventhal
- tleventh@usia.gov)
- gopher://info.med.yale.edu/00/Disciplines/Disease/Transplant/Myths/myths.txt
- http://www.usis.usemb.se/topics/bp-unrep.txt
-
- Leventhal, Critique of French film "Organ Snatchers"
- http://www.urbanlegends.com/medical/organ.theft/
- body_snatchers_film_debunking.html
-
- UNOS Fights 'Baby Parts' Rumor in Geneva. UNOS Update, May 1994
-
- Organ Trafficing perspective from UNOS, UNOS press release available
- from UNOS and also posted at the Yale biomedical gopher site.
- gopher://info.med.yale.edu/00/Disciplines/Disease/Transplant/Myths/theftmyt.txt
-
- Foreigners Attacked in Guatemala. New York Times, 4/5/94, pg. A10.
-
- Holden, Constance. Curbing Soviet Disinformation. Science, Nov
- 4, 1988, v242, p.
- 665.
-
-
-
- The racism myth:
- ----------------
-
- The chance of getting a good organ or tissue match is more likely within
- an ethnic group. Since minorities in the US have traditionally been less
- likely to participate in organ and tissue donation, the chances of a
- patient from one of these groups finding a match is decreased. The urban
- legend, of course, is that organ distribution discriminates by race and,
- therefore, donation should be refused since it will punish the
- oppressors. The tragic reality is that the people they are hurting the
- most by doing this are the people within their own ethnic group.
-
- References:
-
- Kallich JD. Wyant T. Krushat M., The effect of DR antigens, race,
- sex, and peak PRA on estimated median waiting time for a first cadaver
- kidney transplant. Clinical Transplants. :311-8, 1990.
-
- Pike RE. Kahn D. Jacobson JE., Demographic factors influencing
- consent for cadaver organ donation. South African Medical Journal.
- 79(5):264-7, 1991 Mar 2.
-
- Arnason WB., Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church, Unitarian Universalist,
- Charlottesville, Va. Directed donation. The relevance of race.
- Hastings Center Report. 21(6):13-9, 1991 Nov-Dec.
-
- Plawecki HM. Plawecki JA., Improving organ donation rates in the black
- community. Journal of Holistic Nursing. 10(1):34-46, 1992 Mar.
-
- Mozes, Hayes, Tang
- Impediments to Successful Organ Procurement in the "Required Request"
- Era: An Urban Center Experience
- Transplantation Proceedings 1991 October; 23(5):2545
-
-
- The preferential treatment on the US waiting list myth
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- Since patients are not listed by name in the regional and national lists,
- its hard to imagine how this is supposed to take place.
-
- It is likely that people taken in by this myth are having a hard time
- distinguishing preferential treatment on the list (which doesn't exist)
- with the problems of simple access to health care in general. This is a
- problem with the entire US health care system and has nothing to do with
- how patients are treated once they are on the transplant waiting list.
-
-
- ==========================================================================
- VI. Organ donor awareness postage stamp campaign
- and other awareness materials
- ==========================================================================
- After nearly two decades of work by many individuals the Postal Service has
- finally seen fit to issue a stamp to raise donor awareness.
- http://www.usps.gov/news/stamps/98/98084stp.htm
-
- From e-mail to TRNSPLNT from Debi Surlas 7 Aug 1998
-
- The New Donor Awareness postage stamp went on sale nationally on August 6th.
- But, unfortunately, this stamp is not being automatically sent to all post
- offices. Unlike most special issue stamps (like the Breast Cancer Awareness
- and even the Alfred Hitchcock stamps), this one has to be specifically
- ordered by all but a few post offices. So, if yours does not have the new
- stamp, ask them to order a supply, and encourage everyone you know to use
- the stamp while it is available. It is available in the newer self-adhesive
- form.
-
-
- Sources of the "Don't take your organs to heaven. Heaven knows we need
- them here" bumper stickers and other materials:
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
- The Aurora Group in Arkansas: 501-2-CHANCE.
- The New York Regional Transplant Organization: 212-870-2240 and
- 212-861-7370
- UNOS http://www.unos.org (see Part 2).
- Transplant Awareness Inc. http://www.transplantawareness.org/
-
- Organ Donor Awareness Apparel
- -----------------------------
- Hats, shirts, and jackets with donation slogans
- PO Box 18812
- Tucson, AZ 85731
- Phone: (520) 574-8358
- http://www.i-netmall.com/shops/organdonor
-
- Transplant tee-shirts
- Hanging By a Thread
- 391 E. Las Colinas Blvd. Suite 130-456
- Irving, Texas 75039
- http://www.hangingbyathread.com/page2.html
- Email at lcross@hangingbyathread.com
-
-