All vaccinations are required be for transplant. I know several removed from kidney transplant list. Wonder if he took flu and the other vaccines?
The first pig-heart transplant patient was denied a human heart after failing to follow doctors' orders
Bennett never made the list in the first place. In a Newsweek
essay about performing the first pig-heart transplant, Griffith described a "severe obstacle" that made Bennett ineligible for a human heart: He had a history of being "medically noncompliant," or failing to follow doctors' orders.
Other hospitals declined to put Bennett on the national organ waiting list because he'd missed follow-up appointments and didn't take his prescribed medication consistently, Bennett's son told
The Washington Post.
The Post's report also revealed that
Bennett was convicted of a violent crime years ago. Criminal history doesn't factor into hospital decisions about who should get human-organ transplants, but the story stirred up ethical questions about who deserves access to the scarce supply of human organs in the US.
Have to give a shout out to VA TECH, they cloned the first pig, years ago.
Blacksburg company raised genetically modified pig for first heart transplant into human
Doctors at the University of Maryland Medical Center made international news after completing the first successful heart transplant between a pig and a human last week. David Bennett, a 57-year-old Maryland resident, received a heart from a genetically modified pig, which was raised by Blacksburg company Revivicor.
Revivicor, located in the Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center, focuses on the science of xenotransplantation, or transplanting organs between different species. The company specifically focuses on altering the DNA of pigs to successfully transplant hearts, kidneys and lungs into human patients.
The surgery in Maryland marked the first successful heart transplant between a pig and a human. Bennett received an emergency authorization for the surgery through the Food and Drug Administration’s “compassionate access” provision, which allows patients with no other options to receive treatments not yet approved for the wider public.