Monday, July 20, 2009

Obama Care: No LIver Transplants if you drink Part 13

I like this idea. If you smoke - no heart transplants, no lung transplants. If you drink - no liver transplants. Save money, funnel resources to where they need to be used best, most efficiently. You as the smoker or drunk - do not deserve serious care and precious resources - you have abused your body and now we have a right to reject you.

Coming soon - if his deadly plan is enacted by feckless wonders in Congress.




Man, 22, Dies After Liver Transplant Refused


Monday July 20, 2009

A 22-year-old alcoholic has died after being refused a life-saving liver transplant because he was too ill to leave hospital and prove he could stay sober.

Gary Reinbach, who died in hospital on Monday from a severe case of liver cirrhosis, did not qualify for a donor liver under strict NHS rules.

The alcoholic, from Dagenham, Essex, had admitted binge drinking since he was 13 but was only taken to hospital for the first time with liver problems 10 weeks ago.

He was never discharged.

His mother Madeline Hanshaw, 44, said: "These rules are really unfair."

She told the Evening Standard: "I'm not saying you should give a transplant to someone who is in and out of hospital all the time and keeps damaging themselves, but just for people like Gary, who made a mistake and never got a second chance."

She said he was "desperate to recover" but had deteriorated quickly.

Mr Reinbach's family said he had started drinking aged 11 when his parents split up and drank heavily from the age of 13.

He had recently tried to give up and had signed up for support group Alcoholics Anonymous just weeks before he was taken into hospital, they said.

His brother Luke, 18, told the Evening Standard: "They never gave him the chance to show he could change."

Mr Reinbach died at University College Hospital, London.

A hospital spokeswoman said: "Our sympathies are with his family at this time."
Campaign group Alcohol Concern said it is worried a rise in teenage drinking will lead to more people suffering alcohol-related illnesses at younger ages.

"There has not really been much research into younger people's drinking and the effects that is having on health in this country," said a spokeswoman.

She said a study in the US has shown children who begin drinking before they reach 15 are more likely to become alcohol dependent.










Obama

Make Mine Freedom - 1948


American Form of Government

Who's on First? Certainly isn't the Euro.