T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
453.1 | Debat on BCN this AM | TLE::PERARO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:46 | 25 |
|
They were discussing this on WBCN this AM, Charles was kind of
spoutting off about it.
He was interviewing someone who said the "criteria" for receiving an
organ varies from organization to organization (guess there must be
several which procure organs) and because Mantles status was upgraded
because he needed one to survior, he was moved to the top of the list.
The guy he was interviewing said there are at least 40,000 people
wanting for liver transplants, but some have been waiting two weeks to
5 years but they cases are not life threatening, they can still survior
without an immediate transplant.
Also, Charles felt that because donates his organs for free, the
receiver should get them for free, the guy said his operation cost
$125K.
Charles was coming right out and saying that if you are well known, you
become first in line.
Personally, if the guy rotted away his liver due to alchoholism, that's
his problem.
|
453.2 | | TROOA::COLLINS | IYNSHO, NNTTM, YMMV, HTH | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:50 | 5 |
|
Alcohol is only one of the factors. He also has Hepatitis C (which
no-one has yet told us how he contracted), and a small cancerous
tumor in/on the liver.
|
453.3 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:51 | 8 |
|
There are too many unanswered questions to speak on this as of yet, the
main one being, "Has someone else died cuz Mickey got this liver (and
not them).
Mike
|
453.4 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:52 | 7 |
| .1
Charles was full of it. Mantle did not get a liver because he's a
famous sports hero, he got it because he was going to die. Tomorrow.
The criticality of the individual case and the recipient's
compatibility with the donated organ determine who gets an organ
transplant.
|
453.5 | Response was.. | TLE::PERARO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:54 | 6 |
|
re. .4 That is what the person he was interviewing was trying to
tell him, that each case is treatedly differently and
that is how who gets an organ is transplanted.
|
453.6 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:56 | 1 |
| Charles is an axe grinding fool, always has been, always will be.
|
453.7 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150kts is TOO slow! | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:58 | 11 |
| re: .1
There are 3 causes for his liver failure:
1) Excessive drinking
2) Cancer of the liver
3) Hepatitis C - apparently from a tainted blood transfusion.
Bob
|
453.8 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Jun 08 1995 16:11 | 12 |
| ZZ There are 3 causes for his liver failure:
My wife has Primary Billiary Cirrohsis of the liver. This is a genetic
disease...unknown why it happens. The ducts at the bottom are
deteriorating...it is natural for her body to do this...in an unnatural
sort of way. She will most likely need a transplant in about ten
years.
Just one of those things. But there are other causes for liver
failure.
-Jack
|
453.10 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jun 08 1995 16:47 | 6 |
| > Suppose Ted Kennedy needed a liver? (This has a high chance of being a
> fact) Would he wait 128 days for a donor? Would he have to pay $'s to
> Bethesda Naval Hospital for the operation?
Presumably he has pretty good medical insurance. If a Digital employee
needed an organ transplant, he wouldn't have to pay much either.
|
453.11 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:15 | 11 |
|
Reportedly, each transplant candidate gets a priority number
based upon how critical he is determined to be. For the priority
level assigned to Mantle, the average wait is 3 days. He got
his new liver in 2 days.
The country is sectioned up, and there are lists for each part
of the country. For the region he was in, he ranked number one.
He thus got the next available liver.
Karen
|
453.12 | Boozers make better patients | STOWOA::TARICCO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:22 | 7 |
| He only got moved up because he was a famous athlete. If he was a run
of the mill guy, he would have to wait in line like most ordinary
people. American priorites are really messed up! If you can hit a ball
or do a famous crime you're a hero. But save a life or work real hard
at your job and you're not very important. Maybe I'll go have a drink
now.
|
453.13 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:27 | 6 |
| .12
Your proof, please? I know of a similar case - my mother worked in a
pathology lab - in which a run of the mill guy, who was on record and
therefore already typed, got hauled in through the ER and displaced a
patient who was already being prepped for a kidney.
|
453.14 | Does this make sense with CA? | TLE::PERARO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:31 | 14 |
|
With a diagnosis of cancer, does it make sense to go ahead and perform?
My dad had cancer, that is not what killed him, but the fact that the
disease eventually attacked his vital organs and they shut down.
Doesn't Mantel have the same risk? If his cancer spreads, his chances
of survival decrease.
Personally, after I saw what my dad went threw, I'd take the two days
instead of the 6 months of hell.
Mary
|
453.15 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:32 | 1 |
| It depends if the cancer's spread.
|
453.16 | Well, by that criteria... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:35 | 10 |
|
He should have had to wait longer - after all, his triple crown
came on modest stats. Won the homer title 55 (37), 56 (52), 58 (42), and
60 (40). Only won RBI's in 56 with 130, as with BA of .353. After
his knee troubles he struck out too much and couldn't really cover
center.
So if it came down to it, Ted Williams ought to get a liver sooner.
bb
|
453.17 | #7 | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:38 | 8 |
| Mickey Mantle was an idol of mine when I was growing up.
He played baseball when it was still a real game - no
girly men ball players crying about $$$.
He quit drinking years ago.
The Mick deserves all the liver he can get.
|
453.18 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:40 | 11 |
|
Years ago - 1.5 years ago to be exact.
Hardly enough to curtail the damage...
I'd suspect the cancer of the liver is not unrelated to
his years of drinking.
The doctor said that if the cancer had spread, they probably
wouldn't do the transplant (it is mandatory to check for
the spread of the cancer once he is opened up).
|
453.19 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:48 | 2 |
| Only 1 1/2 years? I thought he'd been on the
wagon longer than that.
|
453.20 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:48 | 2 |
|
not according to Matt Lauer
|
453.21 | | XELENT::MUTH | I drank WHAT? - Socrates | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:49 | 12 |
|
> The doctor said that if the cancer had spread, they probably
> wouldn't do the transplant (it is mandatory to check for
> the spread of the cancer once he is opened up).
Doc on WBZ this AM said that in cases where the cancer of the liver
might have spread, the hospital will inform the next recipient in
line prior to the operation to be ready just in case. If the
cancer did spread, then the backup person gets it.
Bill
|
453.22 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:49 | 1 |
| What does Deb Lauer have to say about it?
|
453.23 | | XELENT::MUTH | I drank WHAT? - Socrates | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:50 | 2 |
|
He gave up the bottle 1.5 years ago.
|
453.24 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:50 | 1 |
| And who's Matt Lauer? A biographer?
|
453.25 | What a joke! | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:52 | 13 |
|
back to .0
the answer is "money and fame" - this is America, that is its SOP,
right?
i personally believe that it is unethical and amoral that an alcoholic
who essentially HAD CHOSEN to destroy his liver (and brain cells and
whatever else) can buy himself a liver, while someone else, probably
more worthy, will probably die.
also what him makes so special - what societal contribution has he given,
apart from paying baseball as A JOB?
|
453.26 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:53 | 4 |
|
Hey...he hit a lot of home runs!
|
453.27 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:56 | 6 |
|
how idiotic - so now we're supposed to make value judgments
before giving out organs? this guy was an alcoholic. yeah,
but that guy cheated on his taxes. yeah, but this guy screwed
around on his wife. yeah, but that guy had dandruff.
gimme a break.
|
453.28 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:58 | 3 |
| Re: .24
Matt Lauer is a cute noozreader on one of the morning shows.
|
453.29 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:59 | 2 |
|
value judgements on dandruff holders ? my oh my!
|
453.30 | Wish I were famous so I could get quick treatment. | STOWOA::TARICCO | | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:03 | 6 |
| It should have nothing to do with what he did necessarily. But why does
an athletic star get a better chance than anyone else? Sports are not
everything. It should be based on need, not how much someone is able to
buy there way into everything-typically the American Way. Let's ask OJ
how fame can help.
|
453.31 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:03 | 4 |
| BTW way back to .8 - Sorry to hear that Jack. Hope she gets the
treatment she needs when she needs it.
Brian
|
453.32 | | DECWIN::RALTO | Clemens and Canseco in '96 | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:05 | 14 |
| >> So if it came down to it, Ted Williams ought to get a liver sooner.
...whether he needs one or not! :-)
Based on the prioritization criteria that I'd heard on Paulllll
Harrrrrvey this morning (age, presence of cancer, overall health,
and so on), his placement at the top of the list sounds suspicious,
but not particularly surprising in our culture.
Easy trivia question on the radio this morning: Who did Mantle
replace in center field for the Yankees?
Chris
|
453.33 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:08 | 2 |
|
.30 What evidence do you have for your assertions?
|
453.34 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:08 | 2 |
|
Matt Lauer is on the Today show, and no relation 8^).
|
453.35 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:15 | 14 |
|
> Easy trivia question on the radio this morning: Who did Mantle
> replace in center field for the Yankees?
Joe Dimaggio.
|
453.36 | But I'm sure being Mickey Mantle didn't hurt :-) | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:22 | 18 |
| Today Show interviewed a doc at the hospital. Mantle was moved to
the top of the list because he was deemed the most critical patient
in his locale (local areas are checked first).
The doctor interviewed said the cancer was a concern, but it was a
small tumor right now and had been discovered during a routine exam
for his other condition. The doctor did say that because of the
cancer a second potential recipient had been put on standby; if it
was discovered that the cancer had spread once the surgery commenced,
he would have been closed up immediately and the liver would be used
for the standby recipient.
I tend to think the above is accurate. The doctor made it clear that
they would not use the liver in someone who had metastasized cancer;
organ rejection is the major concern. Chemotherapy or radiation to
treat cancer in other areas would have been impossible.
|
453.37 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | He said, 'To blave...' | Thu Jun 08 1995 20:13 | 21 |
| Does the health insurance of anyone who is reading this pay
for liver transplants? Any transplants?
Most HMOs won't...
Primary consideration to get a person on "the list" is their
ability to pay for the operation. Sorry folks, but that's the
way it works.
Once on the list, patients are categorized by geographic location,
and then by blood type and other body type factors. Within those
categories the names on the list are ranked by criticality of their
respective conditions.
Mantle didn't displace ALL the others on the list. He only
displaced those with similar blood types in his geographic
area.
Regarding Mantle deserving a new liver eventhough it was by
his own actions that he damaged it, as long as he is able to
pay for drastic surgery, why deny him?
|
453.38 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu Jun 08 1995 20:59 | 1 |
| Obviously, Mick doesn't belong to CIGNA.
|
453.39 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Jun 08 1995 21:13 | 3 |
| Being as how it's now going on 15 hours since he was admitted to surgery,
have there been any reports as to how things went?
|
453.40 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu Jun 08 1995 22:04 | 4 |
| They said he has a 95% chance of leaving the hospital. 80% chance of
living 1 year and 60% chance of living 5 years.
Mike
|
453.41 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Jun 08 1995 22:06 | 4 |
| Well, that's a tremendous improvement over yesterday for him. I'm glad it
worked out well.
|
453.42 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu Jun 08 1995 22:08 | 1 |
| $$ talks, BS walks.
|
453.43 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Jun 08 1995 23:22 | 10 |
|
At the press conference at the hospital in Dallas today, a brilliant
"reporter" asked how the donor was doing after the surgery.
Jim
|
453.44 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Jun 08 1995 23:24 | 4 |
| ?!?!?!?!?!?
What was the response???
|
453.45 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Jun 08 1995 23:27 | 10 |
|
Several minutes of laughter and the doctor said something like "I take it
your not familiar with transplant medicine". I heard a bit of the clip on
the radio tonight.
Jim
|
453.46 | | GIDDAY::BURT | DPD (tm) | Thu Jun 08 1995 23:50 | 9 |
| Well, you don't actually have to be dead to be a kidney donor, but there can't
be too many living liver donors.
It's sounds like the Monty Python sketch...
"We've come for your liver"
"I haven't finished with it"
Chele
|
453.47 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri Jun 09 1995 00:27 | 2 |
| The donor is reportedly a liverless, yellow-bellied stiff. No
confirmation has been received yet.
|
453.48 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Jun 09 1995 08:28 | 10 |
| for all those who think Mantle got special treatment please go touch
yourselves in the corner of the room.
and now, for a moment of total immaturity...
:-pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp's
TYVM
Chip
|
453.51 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Jun 09 1995 09:10 | 19 |
|
Some of you folks are truely unbelievable. I imagine your self
righteous tunes would change should it involve a family member of yours
who may be an alcoholic. Of course you will sit here and chant no way,
but that's easy to do since you are not faced with the situation.
Where the surgery was done (Baylor), they have a policy of not doing
transplants to alcoholics. They said that the damage done to Micky's
liver was primarily caused by the Hepatitis C which he contracted
during a blood transfusion and that's why he was accepted there.
And as has been stated earlier, his getting the liver was done just as
it would be done for anyone else, how critical the need is.
Mike
|
453.53 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Fri Jun 09 1995 09:42 | 7 |
|
re: .25
So, according to your belief, if a homosexual, who "HAD CHOSEN" to
participate in a certain high risk behaviour, should be put at the
bottom of the list if he becomes HIV positive, when it comes to medical
attention??
|
453.54 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Fri Jun 09 1995 09:44 | 5 |
| For those that care, Mickey went back into surgery for a minor fix to
something that wasn't doen quite right the first time in. Prognosis is
very good.
Brian
|
453.55 | There's no crying in baseball!!! | STOWOA::TARICCO | | Fri Jun 09 1995 09:46 | 12 |
| .51
You are obviously a victim of media propaganda. Having spent many years
in the television industry, news in particular, the media is very
clever at manipulating their audience. The media drives the minds
of the masses.
By the way, if I were in the same situation, I am sure that if it were
between my family member or Mantle, the athlete would win because he is
has hit more runs than my daughter. That's the real problem. American
priorities!
|
453.56 | imvho... | POWDML::BUCKLEY | | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:11 | 3 |
| They should have let him die. He was old, and has lived his life.
I can't believe there isn't some sick 10 year old somewhere that
could have used that liver.
|
453.57 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:26 | 5 |
|
<-------
Obviously a graduate of the Mengele School of Medicine...
|
453.58 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:31 | 10 |
|
RE: .55 Me, a victim of media propaganda? That just shows how foolish
you are.
Quit babbling and point to a source that backs your claims.
hope this helps.
|
453.60 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:33 | 28 |
| ZZ BTW way back to .8 - Sorry to hear that Jack. Hope she gets the
ZZ treatment she needs when she needs it.
Brian, thanks for the note.
We got the diagnosis about three months ago. She is now on a drug
called Actigall and will be on it for the remainder of her life.
The drug is actually Bile from a Polar Bear...believe it or not.
As a diabetic, she does a blood test four times a year at the doctors
and they found levels of exzymes 8 times higher than what they should
be. That was the indicator of course. A thirty day prescription would
cost $140.00 but fortuantely I have a $3.00 copay! I am indeed
fortunate. We just go on with life and don't think of it anymore.
Now, you all know I always have to ruin a potential tender moment and
make something political. My wife has two serious preexiting
conditions that could potentially kill her and ruin me financially....
OPPOSE SOCIALIZED MEDICINE AT ALL COST! You are hearing this from
somebody who should prolly lobby for it. Don't let those imbecels EVER
use manipulation to appeal to you like the witch tried a few years
ago!!!
-Jack
|
453.62 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:54 | 5 |
| My guess is the cost is being subsidized by the private sector. That
being Harvard Community Health Plan, Digital Equipment Corporation, and
my $21.00 copay! You know something I don't know?!
-Jack
|
453.63 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Fri Jun 09 1995 10:59 | 2 |
|
Digital mr. topaz, who else?
|
453.65 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:05 | 3 |
| Re: .56
What do you go by? God, for short?
|
453.66 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | luxure et supplice | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:11 | 3 |
| >God, for short?
Almost. God is an anagram of what he goes by.
|
453.67 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:45 | 8 |
| the doctor interviewed was asked about Mantle's alcoholism. he
stated very clearly that if Mantle's rehabilitation efforts were
not assessed to be successful he would not have qualified...
Hey Mike, who is this ::BUCKLEY person who appears to have no
interest in anything at all???
Chip
|
453.68 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:47 | 1 |
| .56 is proof that roller coasters cause brain damage.
|
453.69 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:49 | 11 |
|
Chip,
No idea, from what I've seen he's a mailroom wannabe though.
Mike
|
453.70 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Jun 09 1995 11:57 | 1 |
| -1 :-)
|
453.71 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:06 | 1 |
| Maybe he's a John Silber wannabe.
|
453.72 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:13 | 1 |
| was that the sound of one hand clapping?
|
453.73 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:15 | 1 |
| -1 oooooooo
|
453.74 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:20 | 1 |
| I'd like to see Bob Dole high-fiving John Silber.
|
453.75 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | luxure et supplice | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:21 | 1 |
| cruel
|
453.76 | Get off your high horse ... | BRITE::FYFE | | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:43 | 18 |
| > So, as I understand it, you don't mind Socialized Medicine if the
> people who run it are in the private sector, but you wouldn't
> touch Socialized Medicine with a very long pole if the people who
> run it are in the public sector. Interesting philosophy.
>
> --Mr Topaz
Let's see, One is voluntary, one is not. One is market driven, one is not.
One requires a contribution of good faith, one does not. One is influenced
by the choices of independent individuals and one is influences by the body
politic. One is a responsibility and one becomes a right.
Yes, Interesting philosophy.
There are good reasons to agree and disagree with boths sides of the
argument.
Doug.
|
453.77 | | TOOK::GASKELL | | Fri Jun 09 1995 14:24 | 1 |
| I agree 100% with base note, on all aspects of the subject.
|
453.78 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Jun 09 1995 14:28 | 4 |
| operative words "may have bypassed" <- opinion. one, which i believe,
has proven to have no basis is fact.
Chip
|
453.79 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Jun 09 1995 14:49 | 12 |
| ZZ So, as I understand it, you don't mind Socialized Medicine if
ZZ the people who run it are in the private sector, but you wouldn't
ZZ touch Socialized Medicine with a very long pole if the people
ZZ who run it are in the public sector. Interesting philosophy.
It shouldn't be a surprise. It has been proven that government is
incompetent in such matters. If we had gov't socialized medicine right
now alot of transplant candidates would most likely be on ice today!
The witch had it allll worked out for us!
-Jack
|
453.80 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri Jun 09 1995 21:20 | 7 |
| time for some facts:
- The doctors at Baylor do not operator on alcoholics. Mick's been on
the wagon for a few years now.
- Mick was the worst case on the waiting list. He was less than 2
weeks from death.
|
453.81 | I got a liver in 24 hrs. | MSBCS::GARDNER | | Sat Jun 10 1995 00:01 | 61 |
| Yes folks there are some of us who are not rich or famous but recieved
a liver transplant because we were just that sick. I had a severe
form of hepatitis that attacked my liver causing rapid deterioration.
I was told on a Sat. night that my only chance of survival was a
transplant and I was contacted on Sun. night that a donor had been
identified. I was a status 1. (Which basically means there is no
time left)
I have thought a lot about how to reply to this string concerning
preferential treatment. I do some public speaking for the New
England Organ Bank and interviews with the local press whenever
asked.
Do I think there was special treatment for Mickey Mantle. No and
here is why:
A person gets a liver (or any organ) depending on size, blood type,
and location of donor.
Mickey Mantle did not take an organ from a 10 year old. An organ that
would fit a man his size would never fit into the small frame of a
10 year old.
Blood type is blood type. If you are type A+ and an B- donor appears
you are no longer on the top of the list no matter how sick you are.
Location - it is the policy of UNOS (the governing body of theses
matters) that the donor organs be given to the nearest geographical
transplant unit. If there are no matching recipients at that time,
the organs are offered to other transplant hospital. But remember
these organ can only be kept viable for a certain amount of time.
One of the big hudles with transplants. I was in Boston, if a
donor my size and blood type showed up in San Diego it would not have
worked, given the retrieval time, air time and the seriousness of my
situation.
This drama goes on constantly, but we only hear about it when it is
someone famous. In order for a transplant to happen many
levels of doctors, surgeons, organ procurement co-ordinators, nurses,
have to be involved in the process and choreographed to make it happen.
Trust me on this, until your back has been against that wall, where
there are no choices left, and you are talking to your family about
what are they going to do without you, do you begin to understand
that these are very difficult medical decisions to make. Both for
the families and for the medical community. I don't know of any
transplant surgeon who is going to jeopordize his career by making
a decision based on anything expect medical necessity.
I never thought I would be a sort of spokesperson for organ
transplantation. But will I defend a process that saved my
life or might save the life of someone I know - absolutely.
Ask if there are any questions I can answer.
Barbara Gardner
|
453.82 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | Maranatha! | Sat Jun 10 1995 01:08 | 4 |
| Barbara, congratulations on your operation's success and thanks for
bringing reason to this topic.
Mike
|
453.83 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Sat Jun 10 1995 09:24 | 4 |
|
Yes!
|
453.84 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | He said, 'To blave...' | Sat Jun 10 1995 11:20 | 29 |
| I thought that a liver from a 10-year-old would be useable in
an adult. I realize that it was 20 years ago that I had high
school biology, but I recall that certain organs (livers, kidneys)
quickly grow to support the body to which they are transplanted.
Hearts and lungs do not.
It is not the preferred scenario, but it can be done.
But beyond that, I agree with everything else Barbara said about
donor-recipient matching. A close friend of mine also had a
liver transplant in Denver. She waited for nearly a year, but
her condition was not critical. It took her a long time just
to get on the list because she did not have the funding to pay
for it, and her insurance wouldn't pay. It took several months
of intense community fundraising for her to get the first 50%
of the cost (which then made her eligible for the list) and then
9 months of waiting for her turn on her segment of the list.
She was kept well-informed of her position on the list, and
quite often she found her name getting pushed DOWN, not up, as
more critical patients were placed in fron of her. In time her
criticality grew, and she climbed quickly. One night she was
called at 9PM at her home. "Be in Denver in 2 hours. Your
liver is on its way."
Her operation was a success. Her jaundice was gone quickly, and
she was out of the hospital rather quickly (relative to other
transplant patients.) She now faces a lifetime of taking anti-
rejection drugs, and the expense for these are also not covered
by her insurance.
|
453.85 | what am I doing inside today? | MSBCS::GARDNER | | Sat Jun 10 1995 11:27 | 34 |
| Oh your welcome. It is an absolutely beautiful day in New England but
I had to get on the system and see what was going on.
I am on a transplant/medical list that is gigantic this a.m. It has
some statements as to exactly how Mantel was chosen, and other very
level handed remarks on preferentail treatment - which I don't believe
exists. If for no other reason that to allow the people who are
dealing with the most agonizing wait of a lifetime the hope that they
will be dealt with fairly. Although I did not have that wait, it is
one of the most difficult hands a person can be dealt.
There is a transplant surgeon on the list that did an interview
with a local CNN chanel for an hour. Guess what - the cameras were
shut off after he explained the process and said that Mantel was the
sickest person in North Texas (I think Baylor is north Texas) at that
time.
One other comment and although I don't agree with this - it's the
reality of the transplant world. These surgeons are not into
touchy/feeley. All hospitals large enough to have a transplant
unit also have a pr department. They need to do that piece
better - the surgeons letting the pr people know whats going on.
These surgeons are scientist - they look at your blood numbers, they
look at what your body is doing - if they get hauled into a press
conference, so be it.
When I get to work I will try to post some of the comments from
UNOS/surgeons/New England Organ Bank. That is too complicated for
my little VT 320 here at home.
Now back to my gardening.
Barbara
|
453.86 | Size | MSBCS::GARDNER | | Sat Jun 10 1995 11:39 | 9 |
| re. 84, if the adult is the same size as the 10 yr. yes that would
work. Small adult, larger child.
You're right, it can be done, but not the prefered scenario. They
have done some experimentation with this. Remember you're own
liver will grow with you because everything is in sync. A transplanted
liver is fighting many battles, the biggest of which is the immune
system. The surgeons will try to give your body every chance
possible to be successful with this new organ.
|
453.87 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150kts is TOO slow! | Sun Jun 11 1995 17:30 | 6 |
| re: .81
Thank you Barbara! I could hardly believe some of the comments I was reading
in here:-(
Bob
|
453.88 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | He said, 'To blave...' | Sun Jun 11 1995 22:39 | 13 |
| I spoke further with my liver transplant friend, and she said
that besides geography and blood typing, they also allocate
livers by size. Yes, livers will grow to support the body
into which they are transplanted, but they are looking for
immediate liver function, and one that is too small is too
ineffective initially. They might transplant a teen donor-
liver into a small adult, but that'a about as extreme in
size differential that they will try.
Also, time-on-list is a factor that may begin to weigh
against criticality. A person on the list for a year who
still has an estimated 6 weeks to live may end up edging out
a newe patient on the list with only 4 weeks to live.
|
453.89 | | TROOA::COLLINS | At the fingertips of gravity... | Sun Jun 11 1995 23:12 | 8 |
|
When someone - anyone - can name the individual who died because
Mickey got this liver...THEN maybe we'll have a scandal.
Not before.
jc
|
453.90 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Mon Jun 12 1995 07:10 | 1 |
| -1 right!
|
453.91 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green-Eyed Lady | Mon Jun 12 1995 09:08 | 14 |
| >>When someone - anyone - can name the individual who died because
>>Mickey got this liver...THEN maybe we'll have a scandal.
actually, i think mickey got a liver because someone died...not the
other way around...
and thanks barbara for your story and setting some people straight (no,
glen, not you... :>).
-raq
|
453.92 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Mon Jun 12 1995 09:11 | 9 |
|
Good to hear about your success, Barbara, and I echo the appreciation
for enlightening me on this subject. We can read different things in
different periodicals, but it is good to hear the facts frome someone
who has been there.
Mike
|
453.93 | donor/recipient | MSBCS::GARDNER | | Mon Jun 12 1995 10:05 | 27 |
| re .88 - you are absolutely right about size. The surgeons are going
to give the patient and every one involved with this process every
advantage possible to be successful.
Now a comment about donor dying and recipient living. I explained
this to a reporter this week-end and she said "Oh I never thought
of it that way"
A person was in an automobile accident. I had fulminant hepatitis.
These two events had absolutely nothing to do with each other. The
common bond was the New England Organ Bank/Mass. General Hospital/
and modern medicine. I struggled with this for a long, long time.
I couldn't sleep, I had nightmares and I finally ended up in therapy
trying to deal with this. This whole process is no walk in the park.
I had nothing to do with this person's death, neither did Mickey
Mantle have anything to do with his donor's death. They are two
separate events. I think once people realize how random life can be
do you begin to appreciate how special little things are and at that
time you start to not dwell on things that are totally out of your
control. It all just as easily could have gone the other way for
any tranplant patient there is.
Guess that is my thought for the morning. I really didn't mean to
get on any "Isn't life grand" soapbox, but what the heck.
Barbara
|
453.94 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jun 12 1995 10:28 | 5 |
| > - The doctors at Baylor do not operator on alcoholics. Mick's been on
> the wagon for a few years now.
Nit: Mantle may be on the wagon, but he'll always be an alcoholic. Presumably
they don't transplant livers into active alcoholics (or whatever the term is).
|
453.95 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Mon Jun 12 1995 10:54 | 7 |
|
It's something we need to be reminded of, Barbara. Thank you for
today's reminder.
Mike
|
453.96 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jun 12 1995 13:55 | 2 |
| Hopefully, what we've all learned from this is that we should fill out
and sign the little organ donor portion of our drivers licenses.
|
453.97 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green-Eyed Lady | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:05 | 9 |
|
<--- in your not so humble opinion.
i have a signed donor card, but that doesn't mean everyone else should
have one, too. it is a personal decision.
|
453.98 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:27 | 10 |
| >it is a personal decision.
What, did I accidentally type "We should pass a law requiring everyone
to donate their organs"?
We have all these notes about how great it is that people get to
continue living thanks to organ donations. If it's such a great and
wonderful thing, then obviously it's worth supporting. And the best
way of supporting it is to donate your organs, since you can't have
transplants without donors.
|
453.99 | | CSOA1::LEECH | | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:34 | 1 |
| Well...lookie here ---->
|
453.100 | | CSOA1::LEECH | | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:35 | 1 |
| A Mickey SNARF!
|
453.102 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:36 | 4 |
|
Why .9?
|
453.103 | hint... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:37 | 2 |
|
(See back of M's jersey.) bb
|
453.104 | :') | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:38 | 4 |
|
Er......um......lessee, he plaid baseball......er, they wear #'s on
their uniforms......er, I have no idea, good question muppetman....
|
453.105 | 7 | CONSLT::MOYNIHAN | Crackin' the fat | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:40 | 1 |
|
|
453.106 | 9 was Maris | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:41 | 1 |
|
|
453.108 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:46 | 15 |
|
> (See back of M's jersey.) bb
Looking at the back of Mantle's jersey, one would see a "7" not a "9". Roger
Maris wore #9.
Jim
|
453.109 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:46 | 3 |
|
Whoops...Andy beat me to it.
|
453.110 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:50 | 3 |
| > Er......um......lessee, he plaid baseball
No, he pinstriped baseball.
|
453.111 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine Free Baloney | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:51 | 1 |
| There should be a law against donating a Wurlitzer.
|
453.112 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150kts is TOO slow! | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:56 | 3 |
| Uh Chels, my driver's license doesn't have a place to sign for donating organs.
Bob
|
453.113 | ;') | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Mon Jun 12 1995 14:57 | 2 |
|
No, he through a baseball
|
453.114 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:06 | 1 |
| So, this Mickey guy, he a ballplayer or something?
|
453.115 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:34 | 7 |
| Re: .112
>Uh Chels, my driver's license doesn't have a place to sign for
>donating organs.
Well, how geographically insensitive of me. Pardon me while I indulge
in a little self-immolation.
|
453.116 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:35 | 5 |
|
>> Well, how geographically insensitive of me. Pardon me while I indulge
>> in a little self-immolation.
might be bad for the organs.
|
453.117 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:35 | 12 |
|
> self-immolation
We should be so lucky!!
Just kidding!!! Just kidding!!!
|
453.118 | | TROOA::COLLINS | At the fingertips of gravity... | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:36 | 5 |
|
Well...MY organs are fair game...first come...first served!
(I doubt you'd want my liver, though...)
|
453.119 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:40 | 2 |
|
Come on, sir...don't muck us about.
|
453.120 | {{{zounds!}}} | TROOA::COLLINS | At the fingertips of gravity... | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:44 | 1 |
|
|
453.121 | | DASHER::RALSTON | Anagram: Lost hat on Mars | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:47 | 9 |
| >Pardon me while I indulge in a little self-immolation.
Can I watch? :)
I'm not donating any organs, I need them!
Oh, you mean in case I die.......Sorry!!! :)
...Tom
|
453.122 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:51 | 20 |
|
First Man: Hallo! What's this then...?
Mr Bloke: A liver donor's card.
First Man: Need we say more?
Second Man: No!
Mr Bloke: Look, I can't give it to you now. It says 'In The Event
of Death'...
First Man: No-one who has ever had their liver taken out by us has
survived...
[The second man is rummaging around in a bag of clanking
tools.]
Second Man: Just lie there, sir. it won't take a minute.
|
453.123 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Trouble with a capital 'T' | Mon Jun 12 1995 15:59 | 3 |
|
Great movie!!
|
453.124 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine Free Baloney | Mon Jun 12 1995 16:02 | 36 |
| Man in Pink Evening Dress: Whenever life gets you down, Mrs Brown
And things seem hard or tough
And people are stupid obnoxious or daft
And you feel that you've had quite enough...
[As he starts to sing, the wall of the kitchen disintegrates to
reveal a magnificent night sky. The vocalist in pink escorts Mrs
Bloke up into the stars.]
Just remember that you're standing on a planet that's evolving
And revolving at 900 miles an hour,
That's orbiting at 19 miles a second, so it's reckoned,
A sun that is the source of all our power.
The sun and you and me and all the stars that we can see,
Are moving at a million miles a day
In an outer spiral arm, at 40,000 miles an hour,
Of the galaxy we call the Milky Way.
Our galaxy itself contains 100 billion stars
It's 100,000 light years side to side.
It bulges in the middle, 16,000 light years thick
But out by us its just 3,000 light years wide
We're 30,000 light years from galactic central point,
We go round every 200 million years
And our galaxy is only one of millions of billions
In this amazing and expanding Universe.
The Universe itself keeps on expanding and expanding
In all of the directions it can whizz
As fast as it can go, at the speed of light you know,
12 million miles a minute, and that's the fastest speed there is.
So remember when you're feeling very small and insecure
How amazingly unlikely is your birth
And pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space
Because there' bugger all down here on earth.
|
453.125 | organ donation/news from the web | MSBCS::GARDNER | | Mon Jun 12 1995 16:02 | 83 |
| To be an organ donor - I'm surprised I haven't gotten my little speech
in sooner - the most important thing is to let your spouse, SO
or whoever would be responsible for you know what your wishes would
be.
An organ procurement co-ordinator gets everyone together that
would be making this decision. If there are 5 kids making that decision,
and one says no, then it is no. The wishes of the surviving people
dictate what is done. Organ banks realize that in the long run these
people need to support each other in their grief and no organ bank,
transplant clinic or surgeon has any intention of interrupting that
process. This wishes of the family are first and formost. So
talk it over with your families. You will also find out what
their wishes would be.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
If anyone is interested I said I would post one of the conversation
from the web, concerning the media and how they present what makes the
news.
It's interesting reading:
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 08:16:59 -0400
From: Jeff Punch <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: NPR report, more facts
Subject: Time: 7:58
AM
OFFICE MEMO RE>NPR report, more facts Date:
6/9/95
re: Mickey Mantel transplant
The response is from a Jeff Punch, who is with transplant surgery
at the University of Michigan.
Mike Holloway wrote:
> ...but I'm hopping mad at those idiots for not preparing the press
> for the inevitable reaction of every man, woman and child on the
planet.
Jeff Punch's response:
I know exactly how you feel, but I think the blame for the apparent
lack of sensitivity to the issue of fairness may lay more with the
individual TV/Radio station rather than with Baylor. Baylor may
have gone out of their make the point that the same thing could have
happened to anyone, but it only gets conveyed if the media sees fit
to present it that way. Yesterday I got a call from our PR department
asking me to appear on CNN for an interview about the fairness
question (my more senior partneres are all out of town).
Great, I thought, now I get a chance to try to set things out fairly.
Well, to make a long story short, it didn't happen. Oh, the cameras came,
one from channels 2, 4, 7 and 50 in Detroit, plus some local radio
stations (CNN's Detroit crew didn't make our press conf). But literally
AS SOON as they heard me say "this is not a story of a scandal, it is a
story of love, a story of how some anonymous family saw it in their
heart to give other human beings a chance to live again. The donor
undoubtedly gave a heart and kidneys, and possibly lungs as well to
someone deserving. According to what I have heard on the
media, there is no evidence that favoritism played a part in Mantle's
choice as the liver recipient. The news report I heard played the chief of
txp at Baylor stating that Mantle was the sickest person in North Texas
needing a liver. I have no reason to doubt it. That is the current
system: "sickest first." Anyway, as soon as they heard me say that part,
they LITERALLY turned off their cameras. I was astounded. The
interviewers politely asked questions for an hour, but it was clear
that if I wasn't going to raise the spector of a scandal or an injustice,
there was NO story. A pity. I viewed all the reports on the local
stations last night: only one addressed the issue of fairness at all,
and everyone cut the part about the "story of love part" that I was
proud to have thought of on the spur of the moment.
What can I say, but I tried.
Jeff Punch
Transplantation Surgery
University of Michigan
[email protected]
|
453.126 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:20 | 3 |
|
Did Mantle get the bad liver from drinking, or from Billy Martin?
|
453.128 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:34 | 3 |
|
Too funny Topaz.... tooo funny!! :-)
|
453.129 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine Free Baloney | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:44 | 1 |
| He has a gut feeling about these things.
|
453.130 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:47 | 1 |
| Gutsy call, Glenn.
|
453.131 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:49 | 3 |
|
Oh, have a heart, you guys; don't start this again.
|
453.132 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:51 | 1 |
| Why, Mz_Deb? No stomach for it?
|
453.133 | 8^) | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:52 | 2 |
|
I see my request was in vein.
|
453.134 | | CSOA1::LEECH | | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:54 | 1 |
| Oh no, not another bloody pun-fest!
|
453.135 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:57 | 1 |
| A complaint like that, from Mr. Leech? How ironic!
|
453.136 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Mon Jun 12 1995 17:57 | 2 |
|
Ah, don't cell him short, dick.
|
453.137 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Mon Jun 12 1995 18:01 | 1 |
| Leech has a short.... oh never mind...
|
453.138 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Tue Jun 13 1995 07:36 | 1 |
| the string simply shows a lack of intestinal fortitude...
|
453.139 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Tue Jun 13 1995 09:37 | 2 |
|
well Chip, you certainly have your gall
|
453.140 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine-free Bologna | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:23 | 1 |
| I wish you would stop bladdering on. Gall, are you kidney?
|
453.141 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:28 | 2 |
|
Glenn, I can't stand all this bile from you.
|
453.142 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:29 | 2 |
|
And the punfest lymphs along.
|
453.143 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:41 | 2 |
|
nodes thanks to you.
|
453.144 | | MKOTS3::CASHMON | a kind of human gom jabbar | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:45 | 9 |
|
I'm afraid I just don't understand all this, you'll have to spleen it
to me.
Rob
|
453.145 | | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | M1A - The choice of champions ! | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:47 | 3 |
| This is getting to be more than I can stomach.
Dan
|
453.146 | | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Tue Jun 13 1995 10:57 | 1 |
| You're ribbing us, right?
|
453.147 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine-free Bologna | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:03 | 1 |
| We need an appendix to keep track of them I think.
|
453.148 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:19 | 2 |
|
maybe, we can cut to the heart of the matter.
|
453.149 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine-free Bologna | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:23 | 1 |
| aorta kill you.
|
453.150 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:28 | 2 |
|
sounds bleeding serious Glenn.
|
453.151 | | MKOTS3::CASHMON | a kind of human gom jabbar | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:28 | 3 |
|
Kill him?! Why, what gall!
|
453.152 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine-free Bologna | Tue Jun 13 1995 11:36 | 1 |
| This is becoming vein repetition.
|
453.153 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Tue Jun 13 1995 12:50 | 1 |
| this string has now to the bowels lunacy.
|
453.154 | :) | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Tue Jun 13 1995 12:51 | 6 |
|
I can parse that sentence in 3 notes!!!!!!!!!!!
|
453.155 | The obvious retort ... | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Trouble with a capital 'T' | Tue Jun 13 1995 13:46 | 3 |
|
Parse that sentence.
|
453.156 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Tue Jun 13 1995 15:04 | 12 |
|
>this string has now to the bowels lunacy.
^ ^
|_ sunk |_ of
Best I could do with what was there...
I'm sure Herr Binder can (and will) do better...
|
453.157 | | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Tue Jun 13 1995 15:55 | 23 |
|
re .53 - krawiecki
well, your reaction to my comment is quite irrelevant. my point
was that there is a consequence to mantle getting the liver, namely
someone else probably did not.
however your response did bring another issue: is society responsible
to cure/fix/treat diseases resulted from "lifestyle" choices AND in
essence offer NO accountability for those, as a result of their
lifestyle, are DIRECTLY affected?? Before you froth, I said
DIRECTLY...meaning for example this would exclude a hemophiliac who has
AIDS from contaminated blood or a child born infected from the mother.
this guy quit the bottle ONLY 1.5 yrs ago! and how much do you want to
bet that he's not going to fall off the wagon again?
he might have been the sickest guy in N. texas (using by-the-book
prioritization); I am also curious who was the second sickest, and
what's the differences between them?
|
453.158 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Tue Jun 13 1995 16:01 | 14 |
|
.157
>...there is a consequence to mantle getting the liver,
...which is a factual statement...
>...namely someone else probably did not.
...which is unsupported by this unfactual statement.
Who did not get the liver, who needed it right away, and has
died (or will soon die)?
|
453.159 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Tue Jun 13 1995 16:11 | 9 |
|
re: .157
Nobody's frothing as far as I can see...
My .53 was a simple analogy to your .25... not a "reaction"
Comprehension on your part would help greatly in the discussion...
|
453.160 | | POBOX::BATTIS | have pool cue, will travel | Tue Jun 13 1995 16:13 | 2 |
|
well he got the liver, so quit your bellyaching.
|
453.161 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue Jun 13 1995 16:16 | 6 |
| > <<< Note 453.157 by SX4GTO::WANNOOR >>>
>> essence offer NO accountability for those, as a result of their
>> lifestyle, are DIRECTLY affected??
just how would this "accountability" manifest itself? in death?
|
453.162 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:18 | 1 |
| sounds like this guy has a bone to pick...
|
453.163 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:22 | 3 |
|
i think you're right, Oph.
|
453.164 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Tue Jun 13 1995 17:31 | 1 |
| Oph is offal.
|
453.165 | | EVMS::MORONEY | Verbing weirds languages | Tue Jun 13 1995 20:07 | 12 |
| re .157:
> he might have been the sickest guy in N. texas (using by-the-book
> prioritization); I am also curious who was the second sickest, and
> what's the differences between them?
At the time of Mantle's operation they had another recipient prepped and
ready for surgery, in case Mantle's cancer had spread. This other person
would have gotten the liver if it had spread, since the surgeons felt
there wasn't much point to do the transplant on Mantle.
I don't know what condition this person was in, or if he has a liver now.
|
453.166 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Jun 14 1995 07:26 | 2 |
| .156 thank you so much... i must've lapsed into one of the coma things
as i so often do...
|
453.167 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:30 | 6 |
| well how about a brain transplant?
Watched Branaugh's Frankenstein (stinky version).
But who knows? Maybe someday they'll be popping
in new brains...livers, hearts, brains...parts is
parts.
|
453.168 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:30 | 3 |
|
Brain and brain! What is brain?
|
453.169 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:34 | 1 |
| the brain in spain falls mainly down the drain...
|
453.170 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Antihistamine-free Bologna | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:40 | 1 |
| John, you are not Morg, you are not Imorg, what _are_ you?
|
453.171 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:41 | 3 |
|
I yam what I yam.
|
453.172 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Jun 14 1995 11:42 | 17 |
| you know, abby normal's brain!
wouldn't the transplant of a brain involve somewhat of an opposite
objective, e.g. the continued life of a specific individual versus
a body.
wouldn't you have a different person in someone else's body? someone
with a bad brain could donate their entire body to someone with a
with a bad body or vice versa... weird!
would the brain retain the information and personality of the original
owner? what about a warranty?
questions, questions, questions.... :-)
Chip
|
453.174 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:19 | 1 |
| Are you sure Branaugh is not a variant?
|
453.176 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:21 | 6 |
|
Remember who you're dealing with...these people pronounce the name
Ralph as "Ray".
:^)
|
453.178 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:24 | 3 |
| Ralph as "Ray"...
As in the Fiennes guy? Isn't it Rafe?
|
453.179 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:27 | 8 |
|
Hmmmmm...Ralph Fiennes = Rayf Fines? And here I thought they were
saying `Ray Fines'.
Rayf. Hmmmmm.
No sir, I don't like it. Don't like it at all.
|
453.181 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:30 | 1 |
| Oh Lurtsema was fun. So pretentious, but fun.
|
453.182 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Wed Jun 14 1995 12:31 | 6 |
| .180
> Vaughn Williams did it first...
Tell that to the generations of Savoyards who have performed the role
of Ralph Rackstraw.
|
453.183 | grow up! | SX4GTO::WANNOOR | | Wed Jun 14 1995 17:36 | 8 |
|
re .159 - hey mr krawiecki
do you think you can hold a conversation without sliming the person?
in the words be a mature adult??
|
453.184 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Wed Jun 14 1995 17:43 | 8 |
|
.183:
Looks like YOU'VE got a little growing up to do. Andy's analogy was
valid. Answer him. Where do we draw the line on treating lifestyle-
related illnesses like AIDS, lung cancer, liver failure, or heart
disease?
|
453.185 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Wed Jun 14 1995 17:47 | 2 |
|
I'm hurt that he hasn't answered my question in .161. <waaah>
|
453.186 | Can't we all just get along? | TROOA::COLLINS | Green Eggs and Hamlet | Wed Jun 14 1995 17:53 | 5 |
|
Well...if everybody would just be *nice* to him...
;^)
|
453.187 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Passhion | Wed Jun 14 1995 21:36 | 8 |
|
"In time each little waif
Forsook his foster-mother
The well-born babe was Ralph --
Your captain was the other!"
H.M.S. Pinafore, 1878
|
453.188 | | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570 | Thu Jun 15 1995 17:31 | 16 |
| I have only read the first 9 replies, but will reply anyway.
When I heard that Mickey Mantle was going to get a new liver that same day,
I immediately got a feeling that something wasn't right. Despite the doctors
saying that he "didn't get special treatment", I still feel that he did, some-
how.
I am astounded at what high esteem we in the U.S. hold sports figures in,
compared to university professors and other scholars. We have already seen
this in how a former football player (who also had a minor career as an actor,
and happens to live in the media capital of the U.S.) on trial for murder has
gotten hundreds of hours of very expensive TV air time. Now it appears that this
former baseball player has gotten special treatment from the medical
profession.
I think it's great that Mickey Mantle is apparently going to live. But we are
sending a message to people that it's OK to be an alcoholic because if you ruin
your liver from excessive drinking, you can just go to the "repair shop" and
have a new one put in. And that is the wrong message.
|
453.189 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green-Eyed Lady | Fri Jun 16 1995 12:48 | 5 |
|
you should have read more replies...
|
453.190 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Fri Jun 16 1995 13:24 | 7 |
| >> <<< Note 453.188 by TOOK::MORRISON "Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570" >>>
>>Despite the doctors
>>saying that he "didn't get special treatment", I still feel that he did, some-
>>how.
Perhaps that's because it's what you _want_ to believe.
|
453.191 | my 2 cents worth | MSBCS::GARDNER | | Fri Jun 16 1995 14:49 | 21 |
| I think these guys are trying to say read .81, I think the most
important thing I said was "this drama goes on all the time" we
just don't hear about it.
I once met my organ procurement co-ordinator (the one who dealt with
the donor family) and I couldn't stop crying for a week. Yes I did
meet her, but I never found out who the donor was, but that's another
story. She said the most important thing she has learned to do is
stand on her feet 24 - 48 hours without falling down. They commit
to this family that they will be with the donor from beginning to end
and that is only one person in this whole thing.
But I do agree that we idolize sports figures to a ridiculous degree.
And I guess we have the media to blame for making heroes out of
people who don't know how to handle the responsibility. Now I know
that is another topic.
Barbara
|
453.192 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Jul 07 1995 11:40 | 8 |
|
Question: Do those who think that Micky Mantle shouldn't have gotten a
liver because of his alcohol abuse also think that AIDS pateints (who
contracted the disease through sexual activity or drug use) shouldn't
get treatment for their disease?
|
453.193 | ;> | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green-Eyed Lady | Fri Jul 07 1995 12:31 | 5 |
|
michael...there you go again, stirring up trouble!!!
|
453.194 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Jul 07 1995 12:44 | 7 |
|
I heard the wuestion posed and thought it interesting. You know me,
Raq, I would never do such a thing. :')
Mike
P.S. I misspelled patient, fatfingeritis again.
|
453.195 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green-Eyed Lady | Fri Jul 07 1995 12:54 | 8 |
|
you also misspelled question...
;> ;> ;>
|
453.196 | :') | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Jul 07 1995 13:28 | 3 |
|
er, thanks Raq.......
|
453.197 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | Green-Eyed Lady | Fri Jul 07 1995 13:42 | 5 |
|
anytime, wannahunnie....:> :>
|
453.199 | | GLDOA::POMEROY | | Tue Jul 11 1995 05:07 | 2 |
| re: .192 yes
|
453.200 | snarf | CBHVAX::CBH | Lager Lout | Tue Jul 11 1995 09:44 | 0 |
453.201 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Tue Jul 11 1995 10:10 | 11 |
|
Mr. Mantle will be holding a press conference today at 2PM.
Jim
|
453.202 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Gone ballistic. Back in 5 minutes. | Tue Jul 11 1995 10:12 | 5 |
|
.199:
Hope you never have a heart attack.
|
453.203 | Triage , AIDS, and Mantle | DECWET::MPETERSON | Max Overhead | Tue Jul 11 1995 12:38 | 70 |
| >re 192:
> Question: Do those who think that Micky Mantle shouldn't have gotten a
> liver because of his alcohol abuse also think that AIDS pateints (who
> contracted the disease through sexual activity or drug use) shouldn't
> get treatment for their disease?
Huh? I think you're baiting the Right with a question that rests on a very
shakey foundation. In general, as a matter of medical practice, ethical
philosophy, and legal requirements, AIDS victims, whether as a consequence of
their own behavior or otherwise, are just not denied medical treatment. period.
More generally, what seems to disturb the BWLs, and is inherent in the question
posed in .192, is that most of us are willing to make hard choices and, yes,
apply sanctions to some behaviors.
Cultures are defined, in part, by the moral and ethical constraints they place
on the behavior of their members. Members who violate those constraints are
condemned to a greater or lesser degree. Our society (and many others)
condemn most behaviors that are destructive to individuals and especially
those behaviors that put others at risk. Promiscuity (heterosexual or
homosexual) and main-lining drugs are two such behaviors that kill innocent
people. People who die of AIDS because they were transfused with infected
blood are innocent victims of someone who engaged in sanctioned behavior.
People who kill their spouses because they engage in extra-marital sex
are deserving of society's condemnation.
Society has a right, nay, a duty, to constrain these behaviors. Sanctions
against these behaviors and social ostracization of those who engage in them,
are legitimate mechanisms by which society should express its disgust at
individuals who can not control their *voluntarily* and dangerous behaviors.
Now back to the Mantle vs AIDs question: I would turn this question back on
the BWLs and ask how they would apply the concept of triage to this issue
of condemning behavior. Here's a hypothetical for you all:
You have discovered a cure for AIDS (a potent extract from the bark
of coconut trees). On your flight to Stockholm, you crash on a desert
Island. Only three survive the crash, you and two heretofore fatally
diseased AIDS patients. Unfortunately, you only have one vial of
medication (brought as a sample) sufficient to cure only one of the
patients. In otherwords, rationing the medication in any other way,
will result in the death of both patients. The patients are 20 year-old
identical twins, both of whom have full-blown AIDS and, in your medical
judgement have less than a week to live. Twin 1 contracted HIV from a
blood transfusion 5 years earlier. Twin 2 also acquired the HIV virus 5
years earlier, but was (and still is) a persistent user of main-line
heroin.
You've also learned that the pilot of the charter plane carrying you and
the other passengers failed to file flight plan because it was his
intention to commit suicide. Due to these, and other circumstances, you
know that rescue is unlikely to occur within the time remaining to the
twins.
What do you do?
Someone in the AIDS box mentioned that all we had to do was love, cherish,
be more tolerant, etc., etc., and the Jesse Helms's of the world would soon
vanish into irrelevance. Well, I'm here to tell you that real, substantial
ethical and moral dilemmas arise ALL the time. Societies, and the people who
comprise them, have to make choices. Those of you of the BWL variety can
not seem to grasp this essential tenet of ordered life.
Cheers,
/mtp
|
453.204 | | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | Jack Martin - Wanted Dead or Alive | Tue Jul 11 1995 13:02 | 11 |
| re: .203
Bravo ! !
Very well written, and very good points!
I do have a question though....
What is a "BWL"
:-)
Dan
|
453.205 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Tue Jul 11 1995 13:08 | 10 |
|
RE: .203 I don't agree that your analogy is valid. Clearly everyone
agrees that people who contracted any kind of ailment through no action
of their own should receive medical treatment. What was in question
was, whether Mantle was deserving of a liver because of his behavior.
I do not know of anyone who died because Mantle received his liver and
the question had been asked by many.
Mike
|
453.206 | How, not whether | DECWET::MPETERSON | Max Overhead | Tue Jul 11 1995 14:16 | 31 |
| re 205
With due respect, you missed the point: The question I want to examine
is *how* society sets those priorities that were exercised in granting Mantle
his new liver. Whether the priorities were appropriately applied is of no
interest to me, and the Mantle episode does very little to illuminate the
basis for societies right to allocate life.
A secondary issue, a more personal one, is that the liberal mind seems to me
to be unable to deal with hard questions, i.e., the hard and sharp corners
of our lives. Those boundaries that often hurt and sometimes kill. Instead,
the liberal impulse seems to prefer dwelling in a world populated with a few
gentle speed bumps here and there. The liberal mind is compelled by the
notion that Thelma and Louise were enobled by suicide, not by the fact that they
took the coward's way out because they couldn't face the big bad males.
The note to which I responded posed a question to whose framing and context I
believe captures the essence of this thread, vis, how does society deal with the
hard issues of life. Not the kind of issues solved by Marin-think,
flower-speak, and Box-deep thinking. Hence, my interest in posing the Triage
question and seeing what the Liberal mind would offer as their answer.
Will our liberal collegues be able to make a choice?
In making the choice, did the liberal actually apply values that derive from
something other than moral relativism?
Regards,
/mtp
|
453.207 | | MKOTS3::CASHMON | a kind of human gom jabbar | Wed Jul 12 1995 02:57 | 6 |
|
What's all this I keep hearing about Oregon transplants? People from
Oregon who move to other states should...what's that?
Oh...nevermind.
|
453.208 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jul 12 1995 12:18 | 11 |
| .203
A few questions...
Are there desert islands in the North Atlantic?
Would the pilot need to crash into an island if
he was intent on committing suicide? I mean,
couldn't he just crash the plane into the water?
What is a BWL?
|
453.209 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jul 12 1995 12:35 | 1 |
| Where's the junky gonna get heroin on a desert island in the N. Atlantic?
|
453.210 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:10 | 2 |
| Yes, there are desert islands in the North Atlantic. Most of the
Windwards and Leewards qualify as do the Bahamas.
|
453.211 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:12 | 1 |
| How did I know the pilot didn't file a flight plan?
|
453.212 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Wed Jul 12 1995 14:51 | 6 |
|
Since MM had his transplant, organ donor cards (where Mick got his
liver) went from 10-12 a weak to 700 since his operation.
Mike
|
453.213 | :) :) :) | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Zebwas have foot-in-mouth disease! | Wed Jul 12 1995 16:38 | 14 |
|
re: .212
Mike,
> went from 10-12 a weak
"Hey Mac!!! How long have you had a weak back???"
"Oh... about a week back..."
|
453.214 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Wed Jul 12 1995 17:00 | 3 |
|
oops, mea culpa....I knew that, Andy.
|
453.215 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Flintstones' Chewable Morphine | Thu Jul 20 1995 18:38 | 3 |
|
Larry Hagman is getting a new liver.
|
453.216 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Big Vs | Thu Jul 20 1995 18:43 | 4 |
|
Already? I just heard this morning that he was on The List.
|
453.217 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Flintstones' Chewable Morphine | Thu Jul 20 1995 18:44 | 3 |
|
Oh...well...I mean...eventually...y'know.
|
453.218 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Thu Jul 20 1995 18:56 | 2 |
| Did he make a wish with Jeannie?
|
453.219 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Jul 20 1995 21:02 | 1 |
| He should've stuck with Jeannie. Becoming JR killed him.
|
453.220 | | GAVEL::JANDROW | FriendsRtheFamilyUChooseForYourself | Fri Jul 21 1995 09:12 | 5 |
|
he's been 'needing' a new liver for a few weeks now...
|
453.221 | "Hello, can we have your liver?" | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Big Vs | Fri Jul 21 1995 10:35 | 2 |
|
|
453.222 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Flintstones' Chewable Morphine | Fri Jul 21 1995 10:43 | 3 |
|
But I'm still using it!
|
453.223 | Surprise! Suurprise Surpriiiiise! | LEADIN::REITH | | Fri Jul 21 1995 11:14 | 3 |
|
I heard Gomer Pyle just go a new liver. They must be having
a special on livers or sumthin
|
453.224 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Jul 21 1995 11:36 | 6 |
|
They started up the Andy Griffith show again? I guess that must mean
Matlock is done..... did they have an episode where Gomer got his new liver?
Glen
|
453.225 | | LEADIN::REITH | | Fri Jul 21 1995 11:48 | 14 |
|
>did they have an episode where Gomer got his new liver?
It was some kind of group thing where the marines invaded giligan's
island and gomer found this bottle and this scantily gladded women gave
him a liver.
Either that, or some guy named Jim was given a liver so he can go back
and sing in 'Vagas. 'course he wasn't bumped up or nothin' it's just
that he was lucky they found one fairly quickly.
I think the first is more plausible.
Skip
|
453.226 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Jul 21 1995 11:55 | 3 |
|
Skip, what state/country is Vagas in?
|
453.227 | | LEADIN::REITH | | Fri Jul 21 1995 12:25 | 2 |
|
I'm not sure. It's to the west of springfield, that's all I know.
|
453.228 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Fri Jul 21 1995 13:57 | 10 |
|
I think Jim Nabors got his new liver a couple years ago.
Jim
|
453.229 | | LEADIN::REITH | | Fri Jul 21 1995 15:43 | 11 |
|
>I think Jim Nabors got his new liver a couple years ago.
Well on Paul Harvey (yea, I know, great source) today, he mentioned how
Jim Nabors was recovering from his liver transplant and should be
back performing in a few months.
Of course, he never said when the transplant took place, or how long
he waited (or if this was the second one).
Skip
|
453.230 | Probably a very recent one. | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Fri Jul 21 1995 15:47 | 2 |
| Nabors did his usual stint singing "Back Home in Indiana" before the
race in May.
|
453.231 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Sat Jul 22 1995 21:37 | 20 |
| This is priceless -
This afternoon around 4 while I was driving around in my automobile
I had the radio tuned to WRKO in Boston. Andy M<something> had a
talk show with a topic of "What have you copped from the office?"
He had a caller, Steve, who told that his brother, who was an orderly
in the Pathology Dept. at the Texas hospital where Mickey Mantle's
liver was transplanted, had, in his possession, with appropriate
documentation, Mickey's old liver in a jar of formaldehyde/preservative.
They decided to try to find out how much the dead liver might be worth
as "memorabilia". They contacted a sports memorabilia dealership in
the Boston area and spoke with the manager who claimed he'd been in
touch with the appropriate auction houses. He said that the "street value"
for the jar in question could be somewhere between $5k and $10K, but,
that if Mickey would be willing to sign the jar, the price would increase
almost exponentially.
|
453.232 | "But I'm not done with it!!" .NOT. | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | Hi-ho! Yow! I'm surfing Arpanet! | Sat Jul 22 1995 21:55 | 3 |
| Better Mickey should add a signed & canceled Liver Donor Card to the
bottle. That should increase the price googolplextually.
|
453.233 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Jul 24 1995 11:32 | 8 |
| re: -2
The mere thought that someone would buy MM's liver, much less pay
kilo-bucks for it, simply amazes me.
-steve
|
453.234 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jul 24 1995 11:36 | 3 |
| Well, the 3-piece white polyester suit that John Travolta wore in Saturday
Night Fever just sold for something like $135K. The seller (Siskel or Ebert,
I forget which) had paid $2K at a charity auction.
|
453.235 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:30 | 4 |
| .233
Obviously, it's a sign of the complete and utter moral turpitude into
which our godless society has sunk.
|
453.236 | | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | The Lecher... ;-> | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:36 | 8 |
|
Yeah Dick....
Ain't it GREAT ! ! !
:-)
Dan
|
453.237 | | WECARE::GRIFFIN | John Griffin ZKO1-3/B31 381-1159 | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:38 | 2 |
|
How much is Joe Moakley's liver getting?
|
453.238 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Mon Jul 24 1995 13:38 | 6 |
|
> How much is Joe Moakley's liver getting?
how many homeruns did he hit?
|
453.239 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Jul 24 1995 14:57 | 3 |
| re: .235
Now you're catching on...
|
453.240 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:01 | 6 |
|
I don't see what it has to do with "moral turpitude". Yeah, that's
a catchy phrase and it's fun to get to use words like that and all.
But buying the liver of a famous person seems idiotic, not particularly
immoral to moi.
|
453.241 | but I'm afraid disgusting and ghoulish win out | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:05 | 1 |
| Idiotic does come to mind, it does.
|
453.242 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:06 | 3 |
| .240
Get your irony detector adjusted.
|
453.243 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:11 | 5 |
|
.242 the sad thing is, i could picture you saying that and
meaning it, with no problem! ;> sorry i couldn't tell
you were kidding.
|
453.244 | Heh. Even got it edited while she was replying. Gotta luvvit. | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:16 | 7 |
| .243
You could picture me saying that and meaning it? Me? ME??? In a
response to "Godless Society" Leech? Hello? Is this the party to whom
I am speaking?
:-)
|
453.245 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:16 | 6 |
|
>> You could picture me saying that and meaning it? Me? ME??? Hello?
>> Is this the party to whom I am speaking?
yeah, i just swapped out there for a few minutes, i guess. ;>
|
453.247 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:38 | 4 |
| .246
Ackshully, I had figured that, unlike your noble self, the Lady Di
would know me well enough to pick up on the irony.
|
453.248 | speaking of irony meters... | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:42 | 3 |
|
.247 er, oh never mind. too funny.
|
453.249 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jul 24 1995 15:56 | 3 |
| I'd soitenly pay 5-10K to have liver o' Mantle on my mantle.
If I were a football fan, I'd want rocks o' Rockne. Now _there_ was a man
who knew the right way to spell Knute. Not like this namby-pamby in Warshinton.
|
453.253 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Jul 24 1995 16:03 | 1 |
| What about Barbara Bush?
|
453.251 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jul 24 1995 16:05 | 3 |
|
i'd hold out for de gaulle bladder myself.
|
453.254 | | POWDML::LAUER | Little Chamber of Perdition | Mon Jul 24 1995 16:06 | 4 |
|
Omigawd, you guys are too funny.
|
453.255 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Mon Jul 24 1995 16:06 | 1 |
| No, they're not.
|
453.257 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Jul 24 1995 16:37 | 3 |
| re: .244
Me thinks he protests too much. 8^)
|
453.259 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Aug 10 1995 00:17 | 13 |
|
Sounds like the Mick is roundin' third and heading for home.
:-(
Jim
|
453.260 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Thu Aug 10 1995 11:42 | 6 |
|
Yep... doesn't look good..
Well, at least I can say I saw him play...
|
453.261 | | XELENT::MUTH | I drank WHAT? - Socrates | Thu Aug 10 1995 11:48 | 97 |
| Mantle 'in big trouble,' doctor says
By David Flick
Dallas Morning News
DALLAS -- The cancer in Mickey Mantle's liver and right lung has spread,
dealing the Baseball Hall of Famer a significant setback in his fight
against the disease, Baylor University Medical Center officials said
Wednesday.
Mantle's condition was downgraded from stable to serious, and relatives
were at his bedside, hospital spokeswoman Denise Kile Walton said.
"While his immediate family is there, some of his extended family have
started to come in, too, since they heard the news,'' she said.
Walton and other hospital officials declined to discuss the case in detail,
citing Mantle's wish for privacy.
``As of today, he's resting comfortably,'' she said. ``He's joking around a
little bit, and he wants friends to know he will continue to fight.''
On Aug. 1, Mantle and his doctors disclosed that five weeks after he
received a liver transplant, his cancer had spread to his right lung.
Walton said that Mantle, 63, has been in the hospital since Friday, when he
returned for routine tests. At that time, he was found to be anemic, and
doctors suspected that the condition was a result of chemotherapy. He was
kept in the hospital over the weekend for observation and blood
transfusions, she said.
When the transfusions did not clear up the anemia, Walton said, Mantle was
given a CAT scan Monday. Test results examined later that day showed that
the cancer had spread.
Dr. Isaac Djerassi, a research oncologist at Mercy Catholic Medical Center,
flew to Dallas from Philadelphia last week to examine Mantle. He said he
agreed not to discuss specifics of the case.
``But this particular cancer can go anywhere ... usually the lungs, the
abdomen and sometimes the big bones,'' he said Wednesday. ``It just makes
it clear that he's in big trouble. It's not important where it is.''
Dr. Adi Gazdar, a pathology professor at the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, said the brain, lymph nodes and
adrenal glands also are common locations when cancer spreads from the
lungs.
The new location of the cancer is less important than the fact that the
disease is continuing to spread, Gazdar said.
``The fact that it went beyond the lungs is bad enough,'' he said. ``The
fact that it's gone beyond that, the only importance is that the medicine
didn't hold it in check.''
Mantle's doctors originally gave him an 85 percent chance to survive one
year after the June 8 liver transplant. Doctors revised those odds downward
after further tests last month found the cancer had spread to his lung.
Mantle first checked into Baylor on May 28, complaining of abdominal pains.
About a week later, doctors found cancer in his liver already damaged by
hepatitis C and cirrhosis.
Doctors said that had they known the cancer had spread to his lung, Mantle
would have been ineligible for the transplant.
They had expressed hope that they had caught the liver malignancy in time
and removed all of it during the transplant. But they discovered July 14
during routine tests that the aggressive form of cancer had spread to his
lungs either shortly before or after the transplant.
Other than his Aug. 1 taped television announcement about the cancer
spreading, Mantle has not spoken publicly since a July 11 news conference.
At the time, he told fans, ``Here's a role model: Don't be like me.'' He
also pledged to promote organ donation and to discourage young people from
abusing alcohol and drugs.
He appeared gaunt and frail at the time, although he displayed his
characteristic sharp wit.
Mantle replaced Joe DiMaggio as the New York Yankees center fielder in 1951
and hit 536 home runs in a career that ended in 1968. The native of
Commerce, Okla., was the American League's Most Valuable Player three
times, was named to 16 All-Star teams and hit 18 World Series home runs.
He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1974 along with one of
his best friends, former Yankee teammate Whitey Ford.
Mantle's career was sidetracked by many injuries. Doctors have speculated
that he contracted hepatitis from blood transfusions he received during
surgeries he underwent while playing.
After retiring, he returned to the North Dallas home he bought in 1957, one
year after becoming the first man to win the triple crown since Ted
Williams did it in 1947.
|
453.262 | | PCBUOA::LPIERCE | Do the watermelon crawl | Thu Aug 10 1995 11:57 | 2 |
|
so they knew he had cancer before they gave him the transplant?
|
453.263 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Thu Aug 10 1995 12:01 | 3 |
|
No...
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453.264 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Aug 10 1995 12:10 | 9 |
|
I'm not up on cancer diagnostics, but from the news yesterday,
it appears that the liver cancer had indeed metastasized. Before
his transplant, his doctors claimed it had not.
It would seem to me that if it's currently as bad as reported, they
would not have detected it before the transplant.
Karen
|
453.265 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Thu Aug 10 1995 13:04 | 16 |
|
> Well, at least I can say I saw him play...
Yep, me too. I was a kid living in Calif and we took a vacation to NYC..my
step mother's father took us to a couple games at Yankee Stadium during the
61 season when Mantle and Maris were playing home run derby.
Jim
|
453.266 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Thu Aug 10 1995 14:42 | 11 |
|
sigh.... I missed going that year...
Saw him a few years later during a double header with the Washington
Senators (I know.. I know... showing my age)...
He went Ofer in the first game and came back with 2 homers, 2 doubles
and a single in the second game to destroy them. The second home run
was a massive shot into the center field bleachers... At the time, that
wall was still about 30 feet high (@ 460 ft.) and the ball landed about
40 rows back in the bleachers...
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453.267 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Aug 10 1995 16:45 | 4 |
|
sheesh, you guys are old!
(I weren't even born in '61 !)
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453.268 | \ | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Aug 10 1995 16:49 | 1 |
| YES YOU WERE!!!! Well maybe early 1962 BUT I KNOW YOU'RE 34!
|
453.269 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Thu Aug 10 1995 16:56 | 8 |
|
Jack,
That's not very polite.. revealing a lady's age. I happen to know
mz_deb's age, but would never deign to reveal it...
Andy
|
453.270 | :) | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Thu Aug 10 1995 16:58 | 19 |
|
RE: .267
Oh, BTW Karen...
,.',.',.'
,.',.',.' ,.',.
8^pPppPPppPppPpPppPppPpPppPPpP,.',.',.',.'
,.',.',.',.'
,. ' ,.
|
453.271 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Thu Aug 10 1995 17:15 | 6 |
|
My dear boy Jack, did you forget your medication today ?
I may look old (and pregnant, if you ask some), but I can
assure you, I am younger than 34.
|
453.272 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Aug 10 1995 17:33 | 1 |
| Prove it!
|
453.273 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Thu Aug 10 1995 19:38 | 9 |
| There was a doctor on TV discussing transplants in general, and he
said many of the drugs that are necessary to prevent organ rejection
probably are speeding up the spread of the cancer. On ther other hand,
aggressive chemo protocols that could really knock down the cancer
spread would no doubt destroy the new liver.
Look's like Mickey is between the proverbial rock and the hard spot.
|
453.274 | | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | It ain't easy, bein' sleezy! | Fri Aug 11 1995 11:03 | 11 |
|
<----------
From the movie Braveheart:
"The Lord says He can get me outta this,
but He thinks you're pretty much fooked"
:-)
Dan
|
453.275 | | MILPND::CLARK_D | | Mon Aug 14 1995 10:04 | 3 |
|
Mickey Mantle passed away yesterday morning from
fast spreading cancer.
|
453.276 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Mon Aug 14 1995 11:38 | 6 |
|
Hope you didn't have to slide into home, Mick...
|
453.277 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | | Mon Aug 14 1995 17:07 | 4 |
| To The Kid: Rest Peacefully
(from a tomboy who spoke your name with
reverence many years ago)
|
453.278 | | TROOA::TRP109::Chris | blink and I'm gone | Mon Aug 14 1995 19:17 | 6 |
| Best quote I heard today....
" If I'd known I was gonna live this long, I woudda taken
better care of this body"
The Mickster
|
453.279 | | NETRIX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Mon Aug 14 1995 19:53 | 2 |
| Naaa. Far better was the one about not being allowed to stay in heaven,
but while there could he sign some baseballs...
|
453.280 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150kts is TOO slow! | Tue Aug 15 1995 09:29 | 5 |
| Did I hear correctly that he is the only male member of his family for
several generations to live past the age of 41? This would explain the
comment in .278.
Bob
|
453.281 | Four simple, chilling words | DECWIN::RALTO | Stay in bed, float upstream | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:44 | 6 |
| It must have been pretty hard for someone like Mickey, always
accustomed to being admired and looked up to by fans and kids,
to say "Don't be like me" to the world. What a devastating
blow to one's sense of self-image. That took amazing courage.
Chris
|
453.282 | | SMURF::BINDER | Night's candles are burnt out. | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:48 | 7 |
| Bob Costas delivered the eulogy at the public ceremony for the Mick.
He said that Mickey had finally learned the difference between being a
role model, which much of the time he wasn't, and a hero, which he will
always be. Said he got something far more important than mindless,
worthless adulation out of life, said in the end he got love.
Treacly, yeah, but probably pretty accurate.
|
453.283 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Wed Aug 16 1995 19:52 | 5 |
| Costas did a great eulogy; at one point he mentioned Billy Crystal
who was in attendance. He said Billy loved Mickey so much he went
through his entire bar mitzvah using an Oklahoma accent :-)
|