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The power to bring new hopes to a sick child; to be able to free a dialysis patient; to offer another human being the most wonderful gift: organ transplantation, a gift of life… With this perception is that we have to approach the transplantation of human organs. Nevertheless, with the complicated moral and ethical issues, the transplants have become a standard medical procedure to preserve the life of thousands of hopeless patients throughout the world. ... Few endeavors in medicine enable the physician to profoundly influence change in a patient’s physiology and thereby improve the quality of life. ... With one bold stroke, health and life can be restored with considerable reliability and safety. ... Arguments have been presented regarding the huge amount of money invested in this novel technique that will permit the extension of the individuals length of life in times when the problem of world overpopulation is a reality. ... Santiago-Delpin defines transplantation as the act of removing a live organ from a live volunteer or from a cadaver of a recently deceased human being to introduce into another alive human being in order to prolong and improve his quality of life. ... These ones are more beneficial than those transplantations of live donors, since they can be obtained with some mutilation and from organs that are in pairs not affecting a life. ... It makes no sense to attempt against the integrity of a person when the deceased has lost his life and his remains are destined for immediate destruction. ... Always remember this old cite: nobody loves more a friend than the one that is willing to give his life for him, a gift of life.
Approximate Word count = 2278 Approximate Pages = 9.1 (250 words per page double spaced)
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