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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA Push for More Organ Transplants Is Putting Donors at Risk
Across the United States, an intricate system of hospitals, doctors and nonprofit donation coordinators carries out tens of thousands of lifesaving transplants each year. At every step, it relies on carefully calibrated protocols to protect both donors and recipients.
But in recent years, as the system has pushed to increase transplants, a growing number of patients have endured premature or bungled attempts to retrieve their organs. Though Ms. Hawkinss case is an extreme example of what can go wrong, a New York Times examination revealed a pattern of rushed decision-making that has prioritized the need for more organs over the safety of potential donors.
In New Mexico, a woman was subjected to days of preparation for donation, even after her family said that she seemed to be regaining consciousness, which she eventually did. In Florida, a man cried and bit on his breathing tube but was still withdrawn from life support. In West Virginia, doctors were appalled when coordinators asked a paralyzed man coming off sedatives in an operating room for consent to remove his organs.
Stories like these have emerged as the transplant system has increasingly turned to a type of organ removal called donation after circulatory death. It accounted for a third of all donations last year: about 20,000 organs, triple the number from five years earlier.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/20/us/organ-transplants-donors-alive.html

Oopsie Daisy
(6,175 posts)* and let my husband or family members make that decision when THEY are satisfied that there's no hope rather than letting organ harvesters presume that I'm "mostly dead" or "dead enough".
Oopsie Daisy
(6,175 posts)* and a new license will be mailed to me (without the organ donor icon). My husband and children know my wishes already and this does not PREVENT me from being a donor. Instead, it's my hope that this will prevent automatic assembly-line organ donations without double-checking and having a sanity check.
Ms. Toad
(37,324 posts)If your next of kin can't be found, or died/was incapacitated in the same accident, your organs can't be donated because of the inability to know you're wished.
Even if they can be found, some organs are time-sensitive, so if finding your next of kin takes time. Some organs may not longer be useable.
Your next of kin may not even be asked, based on your presumed refusal to consent.
Finally, depending on your spouse, they may be too emotional to consent. I am on my mom's living will, because she is very clear she's doesn't want to be kept alive on machines - and she wants to make sure someone will authorize them to remove the machines. She knows my father may week be unable to do that.
bucolic_frolic
(51,491 posts)The wealthy harvest the rest of us? Could it be happening? Is there a black market for organs?
RandySF
(75,964 posts)Orrex
(65,554 posts)And it incidentally has the stink of a profit-driven enterprise prioritizing the bottom line over all else.
Delphinus
(12,375 posts)sh&t! I've been signed up to be an organ donor forever, but this makes me want to take it off my driver's license.
Baitball Blogger
(50,495 posts)Well, actually it does. You would think that lawsuits would make this less profitable for them.
Blue Full Moon
(2,453 posts)milestogo
(21,307 posts)They don't use your organs if you are over 60 so I'm not worried for myself.
Ms. Toad
(37,324 posts)Live donors are generally limited by age - not because their organs are not viable, but because of the difficulty of recovering from major elective surgery.
For decreased donors, there is no fixed upper age limit. The viability of donation, and if each organ, is determined at the time is death. As we age it is likely that some organs will no longer be viable, even as others are viable. In addition, some less than perfect organs are used with the recipient's consent. If the choice is between dying on the transplant list versus receiving a less than perfect organ, many would opt for the less then perfect organ. I know people with my daughter's disease (which requires one or more liver transplants) who have died on the transplant list.
milestogo
(21,307 posts)I guess my info is not up to date.
EllieBC
(3,519 posts)and never opt out.