Ronald Munson plunges us into the tense and tangled world of organ transplantation. Using vivid, often gut-wrenching cases as points of departure, Munson shows us how transplants are performed, decisions are made, and ethical and social issues arise. Fast-paced and readable, the science and medicine lucidly explained, this book forces us to confront the human and moral dimensions of using donor organs to save lives. Munson uses case examples to explore, explain, and try to resolve a handful of crucial problems arising from acquiring and allocating donor organs. Should social worth count in allotting organs? Should we ignore the dead-donor rule and take organs from infants born lacking a brain? Should we permit people to sell one of their kidneys? Should organs be removed from people who arent yet brain dead? Can children become living donors? He also explores the promises and perils oftransplanting animal organs into people, and the promise that stem-cell engineering will permit physicians to repair damaged organs or replace them with new copies.
A Modern Lazarus: Robby Bensons heart; Mickey Mantles liver: Part I - the case; Mickey Mantles liver: Part II - the issues; That others may live: the dead donor rule and anencephalic infants; Kidney for sale: is it ever right to sell your kidney?; Donors of last resort: protecting vulnerable people; Kurosawa in California: The baby Fae case and unproven treatments; But are they really dead? Is no heartbeat enough for death?; Xenotransplantation: Part I - chasing the dream; Xenotransplantation: Part II - fearing the worst, hoping for the best; Grow your own organs: stem-cell engineering and regenerative medicine;
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