Organ transplant, feelings, healthcare, patient, brain-dead, irreversible cessation, sociological challenges, surgery, MORA Website
Human organ transport has become incredibly important with the rising irreversible organ failure. Nonetheless, the donors and the recipients may face both psychological and sociological challenges upon returning home. Postoperative care of patients at home is critical in enhancing their quality of life.
[...] The whole process, though it wash costly was worth every penny. He did not take long to recover fully from the kind of mental disturbances that most patients experience. This could be due to having a strong support environment of friends, family members, and the medical practitioners who sought his well-being regularly. References Donatelifems. (2018). Have the Conversation about Organ, Eye, and Tissue Donation. [Video] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1jwDxOx69s MORA. (2024). MORA WORKS TO INCREASE DONOR DIVERSITY WITH AWARENESS CAMPAIGN. Par 3. https://msora.org/2024/08/22/mora-works-to-increase-donor-diversity-with-awareness-campaign/ Perfas, S., L. (2023). Who deserves a liver transplant? [...]
[...] Review of the MORA Website and the Video "Have the Conversation about Organ, Eye, and Tissue Donation" 1. Discuss your thoughts and feelings, regarding: Should the transplant team be different from the team providing the care for the patient? Human organ transport has become incredibly significant with the rising irreversible organ failure. Nonetheless, the donors and the recipients may face both psychological and sociological challenges upon returning home. Postoperative care of the patients at home is critical in enhancing their quality of life. [...]
[...] The Harvard Gazette. https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2023/04/who-deserves-a-liver-transplant/ Truog, R. D., & Robinson, W. M. (2003). Role of brain death and the dead-donor rule in the ethics of organ transplantation. Critical care medicine, 31(9), 2391-2396. https://10.1097/01.CCM.0000090869.19410.3C. Yang, F. C., Chen, H. M., Huang, C. M., Hsieh, P. L., Wang, S. S., & Chen, C. M. (2020). [...]
[...] A patient's body could meet all of the brain-dead criteria and yet retain their bodily functions except for reflexes and consciousness. On the other hand, operating on a body that has stopped all its functioning is dangerous. It may imply that all the organs are in a state of irreversible cessation. I such a state, the patient has a high likelihood during the transplant operation. Thoughtfully, the brain-dead is the state during which the transplant should begin since the donor and the recipients need to revert after the operation. [...]
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