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NYC to Dispatch New 'Organ Preservation Units' With 911 Responders

NYC to Dispatch New 'Organ Preservation Units' With 911 Responders

Health care reformers may deny the existence of so-called "death panels," but New York City's creepy new "organ preservation" service is hard to ignore.

The New York Times reports (emphases mine):

Some 911 calls in Manhattan will now bring out two ambulances, one hurrying to the scene and one lagging slightly behind.

The first one will try to save the patient’s life. The second one will try to save the patient’s kidneys, in case the first ambulance fails.

After months of grappling with the ethical and legal implications, New York City medical officials are beginning to test a system that they hope will one day greatly increase the number of organs collected for transplant.

For five months starting Wednesday, the city will deploy a specially trained team that will monitor 911 calls for people who may be in danger of dying, like those having a heart attack. If efforts to resuscitate the patient fail, the team will quickly move in and try to save the kidneys; normally, patients who die outside hospitals cannot be donors because if too much time passes after the heart stops beating, the organs are unusable.

City officials said the project would be the first of its kind in the United States, though similar operations have been carried out in Europe. They said that they believed they had solved any ethical problems by adopting what they called very conservative standards for who would qualify as a donor.

To overcome fears that patients would be allowed to die for the sake of their organs, officials said that doctors and paramedics trying to resuscitate a patient would not be told whether the preservation unit was waiting in the wings until a supervisor had given the order to stop rescue efforts. The organ team, which will travel in a bright red and white ambulance marked “Organ Preservation Unit,” is supposed to remain out of sight.

The deceased patient would have to be as an organ donor and the family would would also have to lend their consent.  According to the Times, the new trial program is being financed by a federal grant.

So, if you're in Manhattan and are having a heart attack, wouldn't it be pretty disconcerting to know that plans to harvest your organs are being made before you even reach the nearest hospital?

(h/t Weasel Zippers)

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