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Mar 19 2008, 04:51 AM
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3,278 Joined: 10-October 04 From: Alabama Member No.: 1,353 |
But as the demands for human tissue continue to grow we have to wonder where the bodies are going to come from, because a number of recent cases have revealed a thriving black market in the trade in human bodies.
In September 2006 the Human Tissue Act came into force in the UK. As well as changing the regulation on how human tissue was handled and stored, it allowed surgeons, for the first time, to practice new procedures on cadavers. It is a change that could revolutionise surgery in this country. David Hargreaves, a consultant hand surgeon from Southampton said: "The Americans have been able to do this sort of surgery on cadavers for many, many years and it has allowed surgeons to develop new techniques and advance knowledge that we've not been able to do in this country. "We have been at disadvantage for many years." There are now plans for all surgeons to train on cadavers before they are let loose living patients. But if that is going to happen the surgeons are going to need to get access to many more bodies than are currently donated to medical science. In 2005, the last year for which figures are available, just 674 people donated their bodies to British medical schools. Body donations In contemplating the body supply issue doctors may want to draw comparison with the situation in the US, where the trade in human tissue is very lightly regulated and a whole new industry has emerged to supply body parts. This is a way for the donors and their families to experience some positive element from the tragic circumstances of a long illness and the death itself Brent Bardsley Anatomy Gifts Registry The Anatomy Gifts Registry is one of a growing number of companies that deal in human tissue. About 500 bodies a year arrive at their Baltimore facility - and the freezers in their warehouses are full of carefully wrapped and packaged body parts waiting for distribution to doctors and researchers, who will order anything up to 30 heads or legs or torsos at one time. It is a peculiar business and it is made all the more complicated by the fact that is illegal to buy and sell human bodies. So they rely on persuading people to donate their bodies to the company and then charge handling and processing fees for disarticulating (chopping up) the bodies and providing them to doctors. On the face of it it seems amazing that anyone would submit their bodies for this sort of treatment, but business is booming. Altruistic motivation As chief operating operator Brent Bardsley explains, it allows people to feel that some good is coming out of their death. "People have a desire to help each other out; they really do, so there is an altruistic aspect to donation," he said. "The majority of our cases are cancer-related. People afflicted with cancer are generally not eligible to donate for transplantation. "So this is a way for the donors and their families to experience some positive element from the tragic circumstances of a long illness and the death itself." It probably also helps that the company picks up all the expenses - saving the family the cost of a funeral. But while companies like AGR are the legitimate side of the body supply business, but there is a darker side - a grisly but very lucrative black market trade in body parts. Money to be made Such is the demand for tissue that anyone who can lay their hands on a reliable source of bodies can make a fortune. Joyce Zamazanuk thought her son had been laid to rest And the most obvious source of fresh corpses are funeral homes. In December 2001, Jim Farrelly, a 45-year-old Californian, died after a long battle with Aids. To ease the strain on his family he had arranged his own funeral - and for his ashes to be buried in the Arizona desert. It was over a year later that his mother, Joyce Zamazanuk got a phone call. "This young woman said we have got some of your son's body parts in our morgue," she said. "I said, my son Jim died over a year ago - I don't know what you're talking about." Gruesome discovery The call had come from Riverside, California, where police had made a gruesome discovery in a local crematorium. In the loft space above chapel and crematory ovens they found a collection of freezers full of dismembered body parts wrapped in cellophane. The crematorium owner, Michael Brown, had set up as a tissue broker supplying doctors and medical device companies with bits of the bodies he was meant to be cremating. It was a lucrative business - he could make an extra $5,000 on top of the amount he was charging for cremating each body. Over two years he made nearly $500,000 chopping up and selling over 100 bodies. And because he provided all the families with an urn of ashes scraped from the bottom if his crematory ovens, no-one was suspicious. Michael Brown was only caught because he was turned in by a jealous lover. Joyce Zamazanuk was eventually re-united with the real ashes of her son and Brown was sentenced to 20 years in jail. Tip of the iceberg Because these crimes are so difficult to detect, many experts feel that there are many more body-snatchers out there. Over the past few years a handful of high profile cases of grave-robbery in funeral homes and medical school have come to light but they are probably just the tip of the iceberg. WHAT PRICE BODY PARTS? Heart valves: $7,000 Spine: $900 Cornea: $6,000 All US prices -------------------- Whoever said anything was possible, obviouly never tried slamming a revolving door.
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Mar 19 2008, 04:51 AM
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Mar 19 2008, 08:53 AM
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![]() Group: Super Moderators Posts: 5,403 Joined: 10-July 06 From: Wild Rose, Wisconsin Member No.: 4,643 |
Would you donate your body to science?
-------------------- QUEST FOR THE REAL TRUTH |
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Mar 19 2008, 09:02 AM
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3,278 Joined: 10-October 04 From: Alabama Member No.: 1,353 |
Yes I would. My health is and has been so bad, maybe they could learn something from it. Who knows. I feel its just a case after death. My soul has gone on, so why not let it may be be some use to others.
-------------------- Whoever said anything was possible, obviouly never tried slamming a revolving door.
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Mar 19 2008, 09:13 AM
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#4
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![]() Group: Super Moderators Posts: 5,403 Joined: 10-July 06 From: Wild Rose, Wisconsin Member No.: 4,643 |
The fact is, I would also and plan to.
-------------------- QUEST FOR THE REAL TRUTH |
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Mar 19 2008, 09:18 AM
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#5
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3,278 Joined: 10-October 04 From: Alabama Member No.: 1,353 |
Same here, but first when I die, I am a donor, all the parts that are still good go to some one who can use them. Then science can have my body.
-------------------- Whoever said anything was possible, obviouly never tried slamming a revolving door.
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Mar 19 2008, 09:48 AM
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#6
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![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 163 Joined: 19-November 07 From: Lafayette, Louisiana Member No.: 7,049 |
Would you donate your body to science? The ONLY way the STATE will take the BODY for SCIENCE is if they can TEST and PROSPER from the knowledge ..... I had a friend and her husband that BOTH donated their body's to science , and at his death , he had been diagnosed with a very VERY rare brain disease . WELL , they wanted ONLY the BRAIN . the rest of his organs were useless to them I GUESS . BUT , his wife told them , IF YOU CAN NOT take the WHOLE body , you will NOT have JUST the brain . STATE required her to CREMATE his body tho . RARE disease was called : " Creutzfeld Jacobs " This post has been edited by CAJUNLIZ: Mar 19 2008, 09:52 AM |
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Mar 19 2008, 10:29 AM
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#7
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2,346 Joined: 11-February 06 From: England Member No.: 3,621 |
I'd will donate my body to science. (Well, that's hoping I don't go in a way that's totally vaporising)
I don't care whether they can pick an choose which organs, in the end each one they do take will be aiding towards saving lives; whether its for transplants or for research. *Off topic* CAJUNLIZ, May I ask why you capitalise certain words? |
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Links to this thread
| Page | Date | Hits |
|---|---|---|
| sell my body to science when dead - Google Search | 20th March 2008 - 11:30 PM | 1 |
| Joyce Zamazanuk - Google Search | 28th March 2008 - 07:37 PM | 1 |
| Joyce Zamazanuk - Google Search | 29th March 2008 - 02:02 PM | 1 |
| body tissue broker uk - Google Search | 29th March 2008 - 04:26 PM | 1 |
| Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 9th January 2009 - 06:48 PM |