1st Edition

The Courage to Fail A Social View of Organ Transplants and Dialysis

Edited By Judith P. Swazey Copyright 2002
    496 Pages
    by Routledge

    437 Pages
    by Routledge

    The title of this profound work conveys the bold, uncertain, and often dangerous adventure in which medical professionals and their organ transplant and dialysis patients are engaged. Built around a series of case studies, The Courage to Fail is the product of collaborative first-hand research concerned with various social phenomena generated by transplantation and dialysis. The authors examine the individuals involved and the workings and atmosphere of some of the medical centers in which these forms of therapy have been developed. They examine "gift-exchange" dimensions of transplantation: the transcendent and tyrannical aspects of the "gift of life" that transplants entail for donors and recipients-and for medical professionals as well. They also analyze the dilemma of uncertainty inherent in medicine, which occurs with particular force in the development of such experimental techniques.Since publication of the original edition, the authors have continued to follow social and medical developments surrounding organ transplants and dialysis. In their new introduction, they discuss transplantation as a gift of life, how and when death occurs, efforts to procure more organs, and organ replacement and issues of equity. This book will be of interest to physicians, medical students, medical sociologists, and anyone interested in the history of and issues surrounding organ transplantation and dialysis.

    1: Patterns in Therapeutic Innovation: Transplantation; 1: Gift Exchange and Gatekeeping; 2: Specialists in Uncertainty: The Problem of Rejection; 3: The Experiment-Therapy Dilemma; 2: The Courage to Fail Ethos; 4: The Physician-Investigator and His Patients; 5: The Heart Transplant Moratorium; 6: The Case of the Artificial Heart; 3: Patterns in Therapeutic Innovation: Dialysis; 7: “To Give Life”: A Study of Seattle’s Hemodialysis Program; 8: Patient Selection and the Right to Die: Problems Facing Seattle’s Kidney Center; 9: Ernie Crowfeather; 4: Changing Perspectives on Transplantation and Dialysis; 10: Transplantation in the 1970s: A Revised Paradigm of Therapeutic Innovation; 11: The Democratization of Dialysis: Public Law 92-603; 12: The Societal Meaning of The Courage to Fail

    Biography

    Judith P. Swazey