akujunkan: (default)
[personal profile] akujunkan
I'm forced to teach an English conversation class at the city hospital. I prepared some discussion materials late last year about the French woman who'd received the world's first face transplant. The discussion went on from there to the broader topic of organ donation.

"Are you an organ donor?" one of the doctors asked me.

"Yes, of course," I said, and showed him my American driver's licence. And as Kurt Vonnegut would say - get this: the six doctors (including a surgeon and two OBGYNs) were horrified. After I'd convinced them I wasn't joking, that is. Upon further probing, I discovered that while five of the six were hypothetically willing to receive someone's donated organs, none of them were willing to donate themselves.

My prefecture made the news today when the family of a brain dead patient approved the harvesting of said patient's organs for the forty-second organ transplant in the history of the country.

Now, I don't know much about the history of organ donation, but I imagine enough time has elapsed between the development of the technique and the present for a few more than forty of the procedures to have taken place in Japan. And yet the concept is apparently so odious to the public at large that the family asked the news not to reveal the name, age, or gender of the donor. Compare this with the atitude in the west, where women's magazines are full of interviews with surviving family members talking lionizing the choice of their deceased loved ones to help others post-mortem.

That will be all.

on 2006-03-27 11:41 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] suriru.livejournal.com
hmmm... i kind of understand. when i fisrt went to US around 8 years ago(?), the topic of organ donation suddenly came up while my mom's friend was driving us around town ^^;; that was the first time i heard about it. and it scared me. (but i was just a kid back then ...still am)

but when she told me her reason why... i was kind of moved. when someone dies, but a part of their body can still save someone's life... it's a good thing, right? i mean.... i think it's not that different from blood transplant so... yeah... ^^;;

ranting. will shut up now.

on 2006-03-29 02:54 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] akujunkan.livejournal.com
Heck yeah, it's scary! To be honest, I don't like the idea of someone cutting my body up and taking things out, but you hit it on the head here: when someone dies, but a part of their body can still save someone's life...

I figure, I won't exactly be in a position to care about my body when I'm dead, and at least I can help someone else.

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