I sure as hell would.
Btw, I actually did say it to a woman who had a child with anencephaly, who thought she was a special snowflake for CTT rather than tx her pregnancy.
Yeah. They were devastated when they found out they couldn't donate the organs because the heart had given out. I really suggest everyone read this article, but if you don't take the time...here is their reaction, after all hope was lost of Eva Grace being able to donate any organs, that they were told they had a possible recipient for her eyes. I absolutely love this last line about Eva.Um, this heart-wrenching piece written by her husband tells me that the baby died in the womb before she reached the point to where the organs were viable, even for research, and that only the baby's eyes were donated for transplant.
Sorry to crush the mood. This article is absolutely devastating, the photos alone are gut-wrenching.
https://medium.com/@royceyoung/we-s...ng-for-the-death-of-our-daughter-79f357dd254d
The good news, though, to go along with the full double eye donation, is that a protocol, named the Eva Protocol, was developed on how to handle cases like this since none existed before and many more people are aware of organ donation.
It's a weird thing to say that in probably the worst experience of my life was also maybe the best moment of my life, but I think it was the best moment of my life. The timing of it all is just something I can't explain. It wasn't what we planned or hoped for, but it was everything we needed in that moment. I buried my head in my arms and sobbed harder than I ever have. Keri put her hands over her face and did the same. Happy tears.
A few feet away the nurses finished cleaning Eva up and wrapped her, putting the hat Keri had knitted on her head. As they handed her to us for the first time, much of the dread and fear was lifted off us, and replaced with some hope and joy again. Here comes Eva Grace Young, the superhero she was always meant to be.
Um, this heart-wrenching piece written by her husband tells me that the baby died in the womb before she reached the point to where the organs were viable, even for research, and that only the baby's eyes were donated for transplant.
Sorry to crush the mood. This article is absolutely devastating, the photos alone are gut-wrenching.
https://medium.com/@royceyoung/we-s...ng-for-the-death-of-our-daughter-79f357dd254d
The good news, though, to go along with the full double eye donation, is that a protocol, named the Eva Protocol, was developed on how to handle cases like this since none existed before and many more people are aware of organ donation.
I sure as hell would.
Btw, I actually did say it to a woman who had a child with anencephaly, who thought she was a special snowflake for CTT rather than tx her pregnancy.
I sure as hell would.
Btw, I actually did say it to a woman who had a child with anencephaly, who thought she was a special snowflake for CTT rather than tx her pregnancy.
You really dropped a steamer here. Are you sure you're not working on a GOP health plan with this attitude?I sure as hell would.
Btw, I actually did say it to a woman who had a child with anencephaly, who thought she was a special snowflake for CTT rather than tx her pregnancy.
Would be great if there were a way to pay for some sort of service that generates brain-less clones carried by hired women (preferably in an artificial womb but I'm not sure that's possible yet)
Harvest the organs/tissue whenever needed (after that clone grew enough, so you have to invest 1-2 decades beforehand).
Feasible with our tech since several years, getting perfect organ transplant before we advanced science enough for self-regeneration/growing individual organs etc.
Ethically not a problem apart from making you feel queasy.
Just very pricy. But maybe you can allow to make multiple copies for scientific purposes and get a cheaper rate while advancing science.
Edit: well that makes it sound too easy. You would need to keep some lower level brain parts so ensure the bodies get the necessary signals including hormone secretion.
You all are treating her as a hero. She's not a hero. She's a woman with a choice and that's it. Her path isn't any more or less difficult to overcome than any one else's.