AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides in surgical technique, the prevention of acute and chronic rejection, the minimization of immunosuppression-related side-effects and transplant tolerance. As such, organ transplantation is used worldwide as a curative, life-saving treatment for people with end-stage organ failure. However, the successes of organ transplantation have resulted in the number of patients on transplant waiting lists far exceeding the number of organs available, with growing numbers of patients dying while awaiting transplants.In order to address this critical organ shortage, a number of legislative changes have been implemented worldwide to increase the number of i...
Objectives: To evaluate the current possibilities that transplantation offers to the patients on wai...
The remarkable progress of transplant medicine in the latter half of the twentieth century has led t...
The U.S. faces a widening gap between the need for, and the supply of, transplantable organs. The wa...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
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...
The organ shortage is commonly presented as having a clear solution, increase the number of organs d...
Organ donation, a medically perfected procedure, affords a second chance at life for many people. Un...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73036/1/j.1600-6143.2007.02146.x.pd
Organ donations from deceased donors provide the majority of transplanted organs in the United State...
The number of available organs for transplant each year falls woefully short of the number of patien...
In recent decades, developed nations, such as the United States, have seen the gap between the deman...
The purpose of the research was to conduct a critical review of the literature surrounding organ don...
Objectives: To evaluate the current possibilities that transplantation offers to the patients on wai...
The remarkable progress of transplant medicine in the latter half of the twentieth century has led t...
The U.S. faces a widening gap between the need for, and the supply of, transplantable organs. The wa...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
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...
The organ shortage is commonly presented as having a clear solution, increase the number of organs d...
Organ donation, a medically perfected procedure, affords a second chance at life for many people. Un...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73036/1/j.1600-6143.2007.02146.x.pd
Organ donations from deceased donors provide the majority of transplanted organs in the United State...
The number of available organs for transplant each year falls woefully short of the number of patien...
In recent decades, developed nations, such as the United States, have seen the gap between the deman...
The purpose of the research was to conduct a critical review of the literature surrounding organ don...
Objectives: To evaluate the current possibilities that transplantation offers to the patients on wai...
The remarkable progress of transplant medicine in the latter half of the twentieth century has led t...
The U.S. faces a widening gap between the need for, and the supply of, transplantable organs. The wa...