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    Parents say disabled NJ girl was denied transplant

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The parents of a 3-year-old girl say she's being denied a kidney transplant because of her mental disabilities, but experts caution the situation may be much more complex.

    Chrissy Rivera, who lives in New Jersey, last week posted a blog entry that described an encounter she claimed happened at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. She said she was there to discuss treatment for her daughter, Amelia, who was born with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome, a rare genetic defect that can cause physical and mental disabilities.

    Rivera wrote that a doctor, whom she did not name, told her and her husband, Joe Rivera, that Amelia wouldn't be eligible for a transplant because of her quality of life and her mental condition.

    "I put my hand up. 'Stop talking for a minute. Did you just say that Amelia shouldn't have the transplant done because she is mentally retarded. I am confused. Did you really just say that?'" she wrote. "I begin to shake. My whole body trembles and he begins to tell me how she will never be able to get on the waiting list because she is mentally retarded."

    Rivera's story was seen by Sunday Stilwell, the mother of two severely autistic boys, and she began an online petition last Friday, demanding that the hospital give a transplant to the girl. By Tuesday night, more than 22,500 people had signed Stilwell's petition, and the hospital's website was being swamped with complaints.

    "I read Chrissy's original blog post, and I just cried. I couldn't believe it," Stilwell, whose boys are 6 and 9, told The Associated Press. "I shared it on Twitter with all my followers and on Facebook."

    Stilwell has been in contact with Rivera daily over the events.

    "There's a lot of camaraderie" between parents of special-needs kids, Stilwell said. "Almost all of us, across the board, have experienced some discrimination. I've certainly had some bad run-ins with some certainly ignorant doctors, but nothing like this. That's part of the reason I did it. I couldn't actually believe this was happening."

    Messages seeking comment from the Riveras through Facebook and to their home were left Tuesday but were not immediately returned.

    The issue the Riveras face is not simple, said Arthur Caplan, director of the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics.

    For example, the blog notes that Rivera told the hospital that "we plan on donating" the kidney, since they come from a large family.

    "Most adults can't donate an organ, because it won't fit" a child, Caplan said. "You're starting to say you're going to use another child as a living donor, and that's ethically really trouble."

    The supply of organs for child transplants is "extremely limited," Caplan added.

    "So you have hard choices to make," he said. "Dialysis may be a better option."

    Other symptoms of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome include heart defects and seizures, and it generally results in a shorter lifespan.

    According to the National Institutes of Health, 87,820 people were awaiting kidney transplants as of last February. The National Kidney Foundation, which seeks to enhance the lives of people affected by kidney disease, said 4,573 patients died in 2008 while waiting for kidney transplants.

    A 2006 study from Ohio State University on kidney transplants for patients with mental disabilities found that the one- and three-year survival rates for 34 people were 100 percent and 90 percent, respectively.

    "The studies reported good compliance with post-transplant medications due to consistent support from family members or caregivers," the paper noted.

    The researchers added that previous controversies over mental disabilities and transplants led the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations to express concern that many people with disabilities are "denied evaluation and referral for transplantation."

    Rivera's blog noted that doctors said Amelia won't need a transplant for six months to a year.

    Children's Hospital said in a statement that it "does not disqualify potential transplant candidates on the basis of intellectual abilities."

    "We have transplanted many children with a wide range of disabilities, including physical and intellectual disabilities," it said, adding that it is "deeply committed" to providing the best possible medical care for all children, including those with disabilities.

    It said on its Facebook page that it was listening to people's concerns and was taking seriously their posts, emails and phone calls. It did not comment further, citing patient confidentiality laws.

    Other experts said that if Rivera's claims are accurate, the hospital's actions are very disturbing.

    "Everyone deserves an equal chance to these organs, regardless of your mental capacity," said Charles Camosy, a professor of Christian Ethics at Fordham University.

    Camosy said that while it's true that there are shortages of kidneys and other organs, the criteria used to make transplant decisions "should not ever devalue those that are mentally disabled."

    "This is a growing movement that transcends liberal or conservative that says this kind of life, because it's so vulnerable, it deserves special protection," he said.

    Whatever the medical details of Amelia's situation, her mother's blog captured the anger of parents with disabled children who don't want outsiders to decide life and death issues.

    "Do not talk about her quality of life," Rivera wrote of her exchange with the doctor last week. "You have no idea what she is like. We have crossed many, many road blocks with Amelia and this is just one more. So, you don't agree she should have it done? Fine. But tell me who I talk to next."

    Mary Beth Happ, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center whose research focuses on communication with non-vocal patients, said that the issue of severe mental disability and kidney transplants has been a source of contention for nearly two decades.

    "Co-existing health problems such as weakened immune system and/or heart disease, which are prevalent in (Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome), are an additional risk that transplant centers and parents must consider," Happ wrote in an email.

    But Happ and Caplan noted that it's virtually impossible to have a full discussion of Amelia's case because of medical privacy laws.

    "We're seeing this more and more where very private, difficult medical decisions are debated in the media without the full facts," Happ said, adding that while the general discussion can be good, the risks of one side or another inflating the situation is "really problematic."

    Caplan said he has heard of cases in which other transplant programs considered severe mental disability as a factor in transplants.

    "With scarcity, social factors do count, with every transplant," he said.

    ___

    Begos reported from Pittsburgh.

    ___

    Online:

    Rivera's Blog: http://bit.ly/xAmRaV

     
    • Shawn  •  Oxnard, California  •  4 mths ago
      I am pretty sure the issue is not because she is mentally disable but because, as Susan said, Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome have, among a LARGE number of physical problems, severe immune deficiencies, which would make them completely ineligible for any transplant. I really want to think that this girl will survive and get a longer life with a new kidney, but I am afraid she won't even survive the surgery. Only God has the last word, there are a lot of kids who had survived and or/live against all medical facts.
      What I think is that they are trying to force the Hospital to do the transplant no matter what and as soon as possible. According to the National Institutes of Health, 87,820 people were awaiting kidney transplants as of last February. If she pass all the medical (immunologic, cardiac, and neurologic) basic tests to survive this kind of surgery she should be given the chance to be number 87,821 on the list.
      • Josie 4 mths ago
        Shawn, thank you for a common sense post. I believe most of the people on here read only half the article. They are talking like she only has a 'mental retardation' problem. They are forgetting that she has a whole host of other issues which would most probably keep her off a list, even a family member. And most Down's people don't have all the health issues that this little girl has, so those people shouldn't even be in the same category.
      • rrtrack 4 mths ago
        NOT if one of her family is compatible! She should be #1 on that list! And as for the immune system thing...I don't buy it. One of the reasons the hospital gave was that transplants require life long medication and they worried about who would make sure she got her meds after her parents were gone. Why would they even bring that up if they knew her immune system could not tolerate the transplant?
      • Kim 4 mths ago
        Rrtrack, "transplants require life long medication and they worried about who would make sure she got her meds after her parents were gone", where are you getting that, I have read the article twice and did not see that. I did see this....
        "The studies reported good compliance with post-transplant medications due to consistent support from family members or caregivers," The article also pointed out that adults can not donate their kidneys to children, their organs are to large.
    • Susan  •  Tampa, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      Children with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome have, among a LARGE number of physical problems, severe immune deficiencies, which would make them completely ineligible for any transplant. These parents are trying to bully the hospital into providing treatment that would be inappropriate for their child. The child has, in the best of cases, only a very limited life expectancy. It would be a tragedy for a kidney that could save the life of a child who could survive for a lot longer to be given to a child who very well could die from the operation or from the effect of the immunosuppressant drugs she would have to take after a transplant.
      • Christa 4 mths ago
        Susan, very well stated!
      • Sarah 4 mths ago
        I like your answer, it seems to not be emotionally driven. My brother died of Cystic Fibrosis 9 years ago. He could have gotten a lung transplant but at that point it would have bought him maybe a year and a half at best, and we all knew this. It was sad, very sad, for all of us, but it was better for the lungs to go to someone who could use them for a longer time, maybe for life?
      • Grand Imam O'Reilly 4 mths ago
        So take it out when she passes and recycle.
    • American  •  4 mths ago
      These people essentially said they were going to "volunteer" and organ away from one of their family's other children. A child can't be a live organ donor because a child cannot give informed consent. It would be unethical for CHOP to perform such an operation. The patients mental development is a totally unrelated issue.
    • Sam  •  4 mths ago
      We dont give 95 year old people kidney or heat transplants either
      • Rachel 4 mths ago
        True
      • JAMES 4 mths ago
        Because they are poor surgical risks.

        But we do give them blood donated by others, along with bone, corneas, and stem cells.

        I'd also speculate that if a 95 y.o. could give something to help a 3 y.o., that gift would be given freely and gladly.
    • justin les  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  4 mths ago
      Life is a GIFT, not a RIGHT. If you are giving someone this organ do they realize it is a gift?
      • LeeB 4 mths ago
        Those of us who have received an organ transplant do realize we have received the gift of life and are very grateful for it.
    • Calamity Jane  •  4 mths ago
      Another inflammatory article from Yahoo failing to provide the facts. The girl can't have the transplant because her immune system doesn't work properly. That goes with the other problems she already has. Even if she wasn't mentally disabled, she wouldn't get it.
      • rrtrack 4 mths ago
        If that is true, then why was one of the hospitals reasons that they were worried about who would give her the medication, which has to be taken life long, when she was grown up and her parents were gone?
      • Calamity Jane 4 mths ago
        The parents can't face facts and are probably making stuff up, no intentionally of course. Do some research!
      • rrtrack 4 mths ago
        No, they showed the paperwork. It was there in black and white.
    • Daniel D  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      I'm not going to demonize the doctors or CHOP. Everyone quoted in the article is expressing outrage over "denying a transplant to the mentally disabled". If it were only that simple. The mental disability, if I read correctly, stems from a genetic disorder, which causes both mental and physical disabilities. A body in a physically compromised state may not be the best candidate for an organ transplant. I wish the best for the girl and her family, not to mention CHOP.
    • AMEME  •  Corpus Christi, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      THERE IS TWO SIDES TO THIS STORY AND WE JUST READ ONE ! The parents didn't hear what they didn't want to hear so they might have thought the Doctor said something entirely different . Or they heard the Doctor right ! But with short supply and vast need very hard lines need to be drawn !
    • Richard  •  Manila, Philippines  •  4 mths ago
      I give credit to the hospital for doing the right thing even when not PC... Limited resources should be prioritized scientifically, not politically.
    • Marie dW  •  Irvine, California  •  4 mths ago
      OK, with far more people needing transplants than can get them, the family is offering to provide the kidney. Kidney's are a little easier to transplant from adult to (larger) child because they are not "installed" in the same location that the organ normally resides in. So maybe they are not talking about trying to use a kidney from a living donor child. I don't think they could do that anyway because of child protection laws. A child cannot give an informed consent for such a life altering procedure anyway.
      So we still have the problem of using scarce resources for someone whose life expectancy is already curtailed by her birth condition. Also, her quality of life is similarly already severly curtailed. Has anyone considered the idea that the failing kidneys she already has are God's way of easing her out of such a limited life? Imposssible to know.
      One last consideration is finances. One more limited resource to be considered. I can almost guarentee that this family is not paying her medical bills now and certainly would not be paying the even higher expenses of the transplant and post transplant treatment. Should that be taken into consideration? Would this girl be treated and an otherwise normal child not? A lot to think about, isn't it.
    • jsmiff  •  4 mths ago
      so if you use logic you are cold hearted.... pc america is what ruined this country
    • RICK  •  Reading, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      It is a horrible shame,but medical prodical is the way it is.you have to consider quality of life issues.
    • babylonandon  •  West Allis, Wisconsin  •  4 mths ago
      Answer this: you have 2 children - both of them needing a kidney to live. Both will die without it. One is a special needs child who will have to be cared for for the rest of his or her natural life. The second child is an other wise healthy and capable child who will grow up to support him or herself.

      Who do you give the kidney to and who dies?
    • Sandy  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  4 mths ago
      It's is hard to lose a child...believe me I personally understand that. I think that the parents are not necessarily telling the truth and it may be more driven my emotions. There is not a suitable transplant donator in the family...she is only 3 and would need a child's organ. When it comes to donated organs from a deceased child it should go to the child who is a match with the most chance for long term survival. This child has numerous health conditions that would not make her a good choice.
    • FredF  •  4 mths ago
      Is this really an issue? Limited number of organs so we'd let a child who could lead a full and productive life die in favor a disabled child who may not even survive the transplant?
    • Carroll  •  Tacoma, Washington  •  4 mths ago
      Just curious. These folks have health insurance? Transplants covered?
    • My Two Cents  •  4 mths ago
      I don't know the whole story, so for once in my life I won't judge.
    • Powell  •  4 mths ago
      I'm sorry but if the choice is between giving a kidney to child who will then go on to lead a full, healthy life and giving it to a child who'll suffer throughout and live a considerably shorter one, I'd have to go with the former.
    • michael  •  4 mths ago
      I see the mentally impaired are not limited to this child. The posters who claim that should not matterr are in la la land. The number of matches is strickly limited, if you give it to one another person dies, so mentally retarded on one hand, normal person on the other, the normal person gets the limited resource. if that makes you mad, talk to god.
    • Andrea  •  4 mths ago
      This situation is one where there is probably more to the story than what we are hearing. While I've spent my entire life fighting for the rights of those with special needs (my sister is severely multiply impaired), I also understand that there are times when there is simply nothing more to be done. If this child is able to pass all of the nationally required tests as part of the transplant network then yes, she should be eligible to be placed on the list. Just being on the list doesn't mean you will get an organ. How many people die each year, even after passing all the required tests and being placed on the list? If the hospital is legitimately in the wrong then they deserve whatever the sanctions are. However, everyone jumping on the bandwagon against the hospital isn't logical without the entire story and the hospital can't give their side about this specific case because I'm sure that the family is refusing to sign a release giving the hospital permission to give their whole side to the media. The family has completely tied the hands of the hospital while trying to force them to be unethical.
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