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Spare Parts: Organ Replacement in American Society
 
 
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Spare Parts: Organ Replacement in American Society [Hardcover]

Renï¿1/2e C. Fox (Author), Judith P. Swazey (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

September 3, 1992
The developments that have occurred in the field of organ transplantation during the 1980s and early 1990s, and the simultaneous rise and fall of the Jarvik-7 artificial heart are the subject of this vividly written and absorbing new volume. In Spare Parts, fascinating, interconnected stories of organ transplantation and the artificial heart are recounted in an interpretive framework that explores the vision of the "replaceable body." Themes of uncertainty, gift exchange, and the allocation of scarce material and non-material resources underscore a discussion that openly examines the escalating ardor about the goodness of repairing and remaking people with transplanted organs. Likewise, the stories open questions of life and death, identity, and solidarity. This important book offers insights into the symbolic and anthropomorphic meanings associated with the human body and its organs, and into the ways that medical professionals come to terms with the concomitant aspects of transferring vital body parts. Both artificial and donor organs, as well as the process of transplantation, are the subject of a thoughtful discussion which touches on the medical myths and rituals that they generate. Chronologically, Spare Parts begins where the authors' previous book, The Courage to Fail, leaves off. More than a sequel, however, this work reflects their increasingly troubled and critical reactions to the expansion of organ replacement. Likely to be controversial, this book is must reading for bioethicists, medical sociologists and anthropologists, health-care lawyers, planners and administrators, nurses and physicians, medical journalists and science writers, and concerned lay readers.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death (California Series in Public Anthropology, Vol. 1) $14.65

Spare Parts: Organ Replacement in American Society + Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death (California Series in Public Anthropology, Vol. 1)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"It is refreshing to see a book that cuts through the perfervid media attention that often surrounds organ transplantation and challenges us to assess the practice more realistically. They discuss developments in immunosuppressive drugs, the psychological complexities of organs as gifts, the emergence of cluster or multiorgan transplants, the use of living related and nonrelated donors, and market efforts to increase organ supply. The strength of this part of the book is its moving reminder of the emotional complexity of the giving and receiving of organs and of how great technological promises are usually followed by dashed hopes, which they illustrate with the shifting fortunes of the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine, key to the 1980s increase in transplantation. In the end, Fox and Swazey provide valuable insights into the abuses that can occur in the process of technological innovation and identify many of the problematics of solid-organ transplantation." --Science

"Spare Parts offers a critical and compelling account of US medicine's ongoing fascination with organ replacement. In Spare Parts, Fax and Swazey deliver an engrossing account of medicine's preoccupation with organ replacement through a combination of insightful observations, lively argumentation, and moving personal accounts." -- AMA

"The authors' perspective highlights the personal and societal problems engendered by these immensely difficult, risky, costly procedures. This fascinating book has messages for all of us." --The Pharos

"A mine of data and background information. The authors go behind the scenes and show what is really happening behind the headlines. . . . A fascinating revelation." --Bioethics

"Fox and Swazey are the most knowledgeable and experienced analysts of the development of organ transplantation. They tell the inside sory of [the Jarvik-7 artificial heart] better than it has ever been told before." --Annals of Internal Medicine

"Provides a unique view of the world of transplantation. . . . a fascinating behind-the-scenes view." --Paul J. Brooks, American Journal of Hospital Pharmacy

"An encyclopedic source....This is an important book which warrants close study and thought by all those who share an in-depth or even cursory interest in the area of replacement therapy or organ transplantation." --vor Lensworth Livingston (Howard University), Social Science and Medicine, UK

"Can be profitably read by those looking for a concise source of details about recent trends in transplantation. Readers will find many useful references and quotations, as well as interview materials gathered by the authors that are not available elsewhere....A wealth of details and analysis." --Peter A. Ubel, MD, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, The Journal of Clinical Ethics

"A historical, sociological, and moral essay on organ replacement in American society....But this is more than just an academic study. Through its carefully grounded analysis, [it] is a powerful indictment of recent trends in American biomedicine and American culture....Because of their unique access to the physicians and patients involved in these biomedical events, Fox and Swazey's study becomes a narrative-...whose interrelatedness to American culture is constantly reiterated. This style of presentation allows us to be drawn into the history, and into the stories of medical heroism and medical defeat. To the authors' great credit, they include many voices: doctors, patients, organ donors and recipients, families, and even poets....Spare Parts draws together a truly remarkable array of interdisciplinary information, sources, materials, and perspectives." --Gail Henderson, University of North Carolina at Chape Hill, American Journal of Sociology

"Excellent--very current information, easy, enjoyable to read."--Lydia D. Schafer, PhD

About the Author

Renee C. Fox is at University of Pennsylvania. Judith P. Swazey is at The Acadia Institute.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 1St Edition edition (September 3, 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195076508
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195076509
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,188,230 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Organ replacement converts "giving" into Camp Mengele, April 14, 2011
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This review is from: Spare Parts: Organ Replacement in American Society (Hardcover)
Organ replacement brings unhappiness on everyone. This book is a narrative of the development of organ replacement in the United States during 1968-1990. After these many years of field research, the writers have given up this field of study because it is too emotionally rending. Their closing complaint is of "...an overly zealous medical and societal commitment to the endless perpetuation of life and to repairing and rebuilding people through organ replacement"(210). Organ replacement, being a life-and-death technology, has plunged the symbolic act of giving into social norms that bring unhappiness on donors, personnel, and recipients.

Organ replacements have come from problematic sources and have had problematic results. Animals, anencephalic infants, cadavers, living donors, and artifices (like the Jarvik artificial heart) were the sources to date. In results, the body rejects transplants, whether single or multiple organs, transplants within the body, or transplants among bodies. Anti-rejection drugs like Cyclosporine and FK506 had effects that interact, disable, and kill the recipients. Moratoria on natural and artificial replacements resulted.

Suffering and death in organ replacement raise religious and ethical problems. A universal cultural complex is the "gift complex," first described by Marcel Mauss in the 1920's. Gift-giving everywhere in the world has these social norms: one must give, accept, return, and redouble a gift. Plunging this symbolic act into the normative system of organ replacement contaminates both donors and recipients. First, the obligations to give and to receive bring pressure to cooperate in the process. But, second, the obligations to return and redouble a gift are impossible to fulfill.
Organ replacement converts gift-giving into a market. Live donors generally resist donation of own or other's organs and there is a natural shortage of cadavers, so there is a shortage. Resulting market forces include requiring patients and families be "offered the opportunity to consent," redefinition of brain death, largely ineffective laws against commercial marketing of organs, and the transition of the field away from service to the critically ill and toward services to those most likely to survive.

Egalitarianism is the rationale for extending organ replacement to those who are most likely to survive becomes the rationale for generalizing organ replacement in the population. Price rationing becomes "non-price rationing," their evasive term for government death panels. They moan, "As poverty, homelessness, and lack of access to health care increase in our affluent country, is it justifiable for American society to be devoting so much of its intellectual energy and human and financial resources to the replacement of human organs"? (208)

Their narrative everywhere exposes the government dog. NIH scandalizes medical universities and hospital corporations by offering enormous grants. Physicians, hospital, and universities want to win the race for technological prowess. Practitioners disguise their experiments as "therapy." All compromise by making themselves "gatekeepers," supposed to protect the patient (179). "Primary gatekeepers" are the medical establishment, who ignore safety data, write incompetent protocols, and lack technical expertise and sophisticated medical practice. "Secondary gate keepers" are the medical and administrative bureaucrats, like the government overseers who fund these experiments but are too august and sacred to submit to even an interview when the subjects die. "Tertiary gatekeepers" are the journalists, editors, peer reviewers, and social scientists who create unrealistic expectations of "wonder drugs," and "miracles," or just look on ("participant observation") with a patient tolerance that hopes for the best. All the gatekeepers meet, study, discuss, and fail to act responsibly.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
At the end of the 1970s and early 1980s transplanters exuberantly hailed the "advent" of a new immunosuppressive drug, cyclosporine. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
artificial heart experiment, artificial heart team, artificial heart story, artificial heart group, heart subcommittee, secondary gatekeepers, artificial heart project, artificial heart program, artificial heart development, artificial heart recipient, artificial heart implants, second implant, bridge implants, organ transplantation policy, implant series, total artificial heart, cardiac replacement, permanent artificial heart, medical commons, permanent implants, desperate appliance, cadaver organs, first implant, transplantable organs, transplant community
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Barney Clark, University of Utah, United States, Salt Lake City, William Schroeder, Audubon Hospital, Humana Heart Institute, Robert Jarvik, Humana Hospital Audubon, Una Loy, Murray Haydon, Willem Kolff, Loma Linda, Thomas Starzl, Chase Peterson, Humana Corporation, Jack Burcham, Kolff Medical Associates, Allan Lansing, Tin Woodman, Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, Mike King, National Heart, National Institutes of Health, Council of The Transplantation Society
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