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The Law and Economics of Organ Procurement*

Law & Policy, 1990
This paper presents an economic analysis of the organ procurement system in the U.S. and examines proposals to alleviate the shortage of transplantable organs. The paper's principal conclusions are: (1) Although non‐market solutions deserve the highest priority, demand increases fueled by improvements in transplant technology will probably make some ...
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Inefficiency in Cadaveric Organ Procurement

Southern Economic Journal, 2006
The shortage of cadaveric human organs made available for transplantation has reached critical proportions and is now causing over 6000 deaths each year in the United States alone. Economically, this shortage appears to stem from at least two principal underlying causes, both of which are attributable to the 1984 National Organ Transplant Act: (i) a ...
Richard P. Saba   +2 more
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Regional procurement team for abdominal organs

Transplantation Proceedings, 2004
The graft shortages make multiorgan procurements mandatory. We describe the results of a regional procurement team policy that has been employed over a 5-year period.Three hundred forty-three multiorgan procurements were performed by a regional team using an en bloc harvesting method.Among 1374 grafts procured, none was discarded because of iatrogenic ...
SIGNORI S   +11 more
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Questionnaire on Brain Death and Organ Procurement.

Experimental and Clinical Transplantation, 2017
OBJECTIVES The subject of organs for transplant after brain death raises many concerns, including definition and timing of death, how to permit human organ transplant, and the idea of paying for organs.
S. Hammad   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Organ procurement organization (OPO),
best practices

Clinical Transplantation, 2001
There are currently 59 organ procurement organizations (OPOs) in the United States which serve their assigned geographic areas with variable productivity. Knowledge of organizational characteristics, programs and practices of more successful OPOs may be useful to increase the productivity of less successful OPOs.
R. R. Bollinger   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The emergence of “personhood” in organ procurement

Transplantation Reviews, 2008
This article begins and ends with an account of the actions of one person. I propose that such heroics are rooted in an instinctual recognition of "personhood" as it emerges from a particular human "other." I propose that heroism grounded in the recognition of "personhood" is descriptive of those acts of organ donation that are founded on free will ...
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Thoracic Organ Procurement

2008
Background: After external and internal organ cooling and preservation, the first thoracic organs are procured. During lung retrieval, the anaesthetist must be present in the OR. Procured organs are packed according to the international or national rules and put on ice in special transport boxes.
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Organ Procurement

JAMA, 1993
... One is struck by the high level of organ procurement charges in spite of the characterization of organ procurement as altruistic. Although the median organ procurement charges in 1988, documented by Evans, ranged from nearly $16,000 to nearly $21,000 (1991 dollars), there was not a penny for the accident victim's/organ donor's family.
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A role for physician assistants in organ procurement

Progress in Transplantation, 2001
Healthcare in the United States, as well as the environment in which physician assistants work, is rapidly changing. Consequently, the role of a physician assistant is expanding to meet the needs of patients and physicians of all specialties of medicine and surgery.
openaire   +3 more sources

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