Originally posted by Flyndaran
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Alcoholic dies after being refused transplant
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Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
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Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostHe was to the point where he was too ill to be sent home. I don't think he would have lasted 6 months even in the hospital. And technically, it's *exactly* in their purview. They have a line for how long people need to be sober. Six months. Who gave them the right? Legislation. Why? Because they need to be reasonably certain that someone means what they say, but still make sure that someone won't usually die in that time frame.
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostSee? That's actually helpful though overly snarky. I doubted they would have it on the web, and I didn't want to call an agency just for that fact.
National guidelines dictate that to qualify for a donor organ, a potential recipient must prove he has the determination to stop drinking by remaining abstinent for six months.
Try it out. You might be surprised by how much better informed you will sound when people don't have to regurgitate the facts at you that have already been given to everybody else.
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostI guess the rest of your posts agree with that.
I don't think moral choices should have such an effect in a secular governmental institution.
Would you have a problem if I joined a transplant organization and chose to allow atheists to get higher priority than the religious because the seond are more likely to make irrational decisions?I am a sexy shoeless god of war!
Minus the sexy and I'm wearing shoes.
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostOr if I had a study showing that atheists make fewer self-destructive choices.Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
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Originally posted by BroomJockey View Post...Drinkers damage livers. Smokers damage lungs. People unwilling to give up these activities would damage new organs as well. So unless a link is discovered between religious behaviour and failing kidneys, I don't think it would be found relevant. It's the direct behaviour they're interested in, not any causitive factors. If they were interested in the factors involved, then they'd have staggered tiers based on how many alcoholics in your family.
I don't think it would be relevant either, but I don't like determining who gets to live and die because of diseases like addiction or mental illness. I just would like the boards to be consistent in their supposedly logical rules.
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostI just would like the boards to be consistent in their supposedly logical rules.
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostI don't like determining who gets to live and die because of diseases like addiction or mental illness.
It's allocation of scarce resources. We put it where it's likely to be used the longest. There needs to be *some* way to pick who gets what organ when more than one person is a match. And I'd rather it's based on something medical rather than going "He's a father of 3, and young, and that guy's an ex-con. Give it to the dad."Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
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Originally posted by BroomJockey View Post...
It's allocation of scarce resources. We put it where it's likely to be used the longest. There needs to be *some* way to pick who gets what organ when more than one person is a match. And I'd rather it's based on something medical rather than going "He's a father of 3, and young, and that guy's an ex-con. Give it to the dad."
Used the longest? Ich, I don't like reducing a person's value to age. Damnit! My mother is just as valuable as some mewling child.
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostUsed the longest? Ich, I don't like reducing a person's value to age. Damnit! My mother is just as valuable as some mewling child.
Those are the decisions that are made, and they are very hard decisions. I know I couldn't make them.The test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder, not the visible evidence of police action in dealing with it. Robert Peel
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostUsed the longest? Ich, I don't like reducing a person's value to age.Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
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Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostI didn't say age. You're fixated on that concept. It's completely possible that a 60 year old would get 10+ years out of a liver, and some 20 year old would get maybe 5 due to other concerns.
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Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostI may have been conflating this thread and the one about feritlity treatment.
On topic: Dammit, why can't we grow livers yet! This is 2009! We're supposed to have flying cars and space cities! Geez.Any comment I make should not be taken as an absolute, unless I say it should be. Even this one.
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Originally posted by BroomJockey View PostOn topic: Dammit, why can't we grow livers yet! This is 2009!The test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder, not the visible evidence of police action in dealing with it. Robert Peel
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