New drugs and techniques have been steadily increasing the number of patients able to benefit from organ transplants, but the supply of organs has not kept pace with demand. While about 39,000 candidates join waiting lists for organs in the United States every year, only about 14,000 deaths occur in a manner leaving organs usable for transplants and only about half of those organs, approximately three per cadaver, are actually donated. Lack of permission to use the remaining suitable organs leads to about sixteen deaths daily in the United States and is why over 85,000 candidates remain on transplant waiting lists. The majority are waiting for kidneys, resulting in increased use of dialysis, which is not only burdensome for patients but al...
The waiting list for solid organ transplantation in theUnited States now exceeds 92 000 persons (app...
Over 6,500 individuals died in 2012 waiting for an organ transplant in the United States. In the con...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...
New drugs and techniques have been steadily increasing the number of patients able to benefit from o...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
On an average day, 15 people die waiting for an organ that could have saved their lives-that\u27s so...
Every year, the United States receives 35,000 new requests for kidney transplants. Kidney reserves, ...
Organ donations from deceased donors provide the majority of transplanted organs in the United State...
Organ donation, a medically perfected procedure, affords a second chance at life for many people. Un...
The U.S. faces a widening gap between the need for, and the supply of, transplantable organs. The wa...
As people around the world continue to die on organ transplant waiting lists, the international comm...
New strategies are needed to encourage organ donation. Altruism, the impulse that underlies our pres...
Organ transplantation is a comprehensive subject covering many different issues: medical, social, po...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
This article addresses the growing organ shortage in America, analyzes current donation and procurem...
The waiting list for solid organ transplantation in theUnited States now exceeds 92 000 persons (app...
Over 6,500 individuals died in 2012 waiting for an organ transplant in the United States. In the con...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...
New drugs and techniques have been steadily increasing the number of patients able to benefit from o...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
On an average day, 15 people die waiting for an organ that could have saved their lives-that\u27s so...
Every year, the United States receives 35,000 new requests for kidney transplants. Kidney reserves, ...
Organ donations from deceased donors provide the majority of transplanted organs in the United State...
Organ donation, a medically perfected procedure, affords a second chance at life for many people. Un...
The U.S. faces a widening gap between the need for, and the supply of, transplantable organs. The wa...
As people around the world continue to die on organ transplant waiting lists, the international comm...
New strategies are needed to encourage organ donation. Altruism, the impulse that underlies our pres...
Organ transplantation is a comprehensive subject covering many different issues: medical, social, po...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
This article addresses the growing organ shortage in America, analyzes current donation and procurem...
The waiting list for solid organ transplantation in theUnited States now exceeds 92 000 persons (app...
Over 6,500 individuals died in 2012 waiting for an organ transplant in the United States. In the con...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...