I’d love to know what makes this such an easy read. This is good writing to learn from.
I'm curious how important agility with hands are for modern surgeons compared to anatomy and medical knowledge in general. What makes a "great surgeon" today?
Source: surgeons in my family and wider sphere of acquaintance.
Now, difficult to tie I'll grant: fingers and string both covered in blood and possibly fatty residue, time crunch, limited access...
Further, unless things have changed I believe you will also lose your gallbladder as a result of donating a liver lobe.
- "I'm outraged that death is brain death [or something else from the medical establishment] and not [some other crank folk definition]"
- "We should be able to pay for livers!" has never considered that he or his extended family could have been poor enough to be exploited by such a world
- "There's no organ exploitation in Asia" despite donation rates being so low and transplants being so high, the organs must be coming from somewhere
- "All transplant is exploitative" he says, until he or a family member needs a life-saving organ donation
Imagine if billionaires had to pay the "riff-raff" organ donors to continue living their vain and hollow lives instead of bribing hospitals and public officials to cut in line. If I were old and on my way out the door, this would give me a chance to leave something behind for my wife and kids.
Let's say I have a heart condition or neurodegenerative disease and I'm living on borrowed time. I could make at least a couple hundred thousand selling 1 lobe out of my very healthy liver to a desperate billionaire. Knowing my heart or brain will give out long before my liver, I can accept my fate and die with courage and dignity and as an added bonus, also help my family by profiteering off of the cowardice and selfishness of people like Larry Ellison or Jeff Bezos.
Matthew 25:29 comes to mind
> For to everyone who has will more be given, and he will have an abundance. But from the one who has not, even what he has will be taken away.
And the most impressive thing I managed today is to test out a data and schema replication utility...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Calne
> Sir Roy Yorke Calne FRS FRCS (30 December 1930 – 6 January 2024) was a British surgeon and pioneer in organ transplantation. He was part of the team that performed the first liver transplantation operation in Europe in 1968, the world's first liver, heart and lung transplantation in 1987, the first intestinal transplant in the UK in 1992 and the first successful combined stomach, intestine, pancreas, liver and kidney cluster transplantation in 1994.
What? Not that i'm aware of.
MRS. BROWN: 'Ere. What's going on?
MAN: Uh, he's donating his liver, madam.
MR. BROWN: [screaming]
MRS. BROWN: Is this because he took out one of those silly cards?
[0] http://www.montypython.50webs.com/scripts/Meaning_of_Life/9....
An incredible piece highlighting something people should know more about; thanks for posting this!
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrosurgery
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45604779
Will probably pick this back up and skip over the rest of that part though!