• Breadhax0r@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    It’s not super clear, but the article makes it sound like if a partial graft from a live donor fails, then the recipient is automatically fast tracked for a new transplant from a deceased donor.

    If that’s the case then maybe policy should be changed in the case of alcohol abuse.

    • CommanderCloon@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      The policy isn’t there just to be extra nice, it’s because otherwise the patient dies without a liver.

      Since she was too sick for a partial liver transplant, and not eligible for a dead donor full liver transplant, she would have just died.

      It might seem cruel but the same is done for a lot of other procedures; if the chance of you dying in surgery is way too high, doctors won’t take the risk, they’re not executioners.

      It’s not a moral judgement about her alcoholism, the same would have been true if she had a cancer no surgeon would take on.

      • Breadhax0r@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I totally understand the mortality aspect, I was just thinking if a patient is 100% going to die from liver failure without a transplant, any chance to live from a live donor seems worth it. Of course I don’t know any statistics so I have nothing to base it on.

        Maybe euthanasia should be a legal option instead of a slow agonizing death that puts next of kin into medical debt.