Commentary

Organ transplantation: Unvaccinated need not apply


 

Transplant denial is nothing new

People get turned down for organ transplants all the time. My patient with end-stage dilated cardiomyopathy was denied a heart transplant when it was discovered that he had scores of outstanding parking tickets. This was seen as a surrogate for an inability to afford his antirejection medication.

Another patient swore that her positive cotinine levels were caused by endless hours at the bingo hall where second-hand smoke swirled. She was also denied. Many potential candidates who are in acute decline hold precariously to newfound sobriety. They are denied. A patient’s boyfriend told the transplant team that he couldn’t be relied upon to drive her to her appointments. She was denied.

Many people who engage in antisocial behaviors have no idea that these actions may result in the denial of an organ transplant should their future selves need one. These are hard lines, but everyone should agree that the odds of survival are heavily in favor of the consistently adherent.

We should take this opportunity to educate the public on how complicated obtaining an organ transplant can be. More than 6,000 people die each year waiting for an organ because of the supply-and-demand disparities in the transplantation arena. I’m willing to bet that many of the loudest protesters in favor of unvaccinated transplant recipients have not signed the organ donor box on the back of their driver’s license. This conversation is an opportunity to change that and remind people that organ donation may be their only opportunity to save a fellow human’s life.

Again, to quote Ted Lasso: “If you care about someone and you got a little love in your heart, there ain’t nothing you can’t get through together.” That philosophy should apply to the tasks of selecting the best organ donors as well as the best organ recipients.

And every organ should go to the one who will honor their donor and their donor’s family by taking the best care of that ultimate gift of life, including being vaccinated against COVID-19.

Dr. Walton-Shirley is a native Kentuckian who retired from full-time invasive cardiology. She enjoys locums work in Montana and is a champion of physician rights and patient safety. She disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Pig heart successfully transplanted to man
MDedge Internal Medicine
What does a pig-to-human heart transplant mean for medicine?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Cardiac inflammation can be present after mild COVID infection
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hypertension protocols curb racial bias in therapeutic inertia
MDedge Internal Medicine
No amount of alcohol safe for the heart: WHF
MDedge Internal Medicine
Uptake uncertain for potent new LDL-lowerer inclisiran
MDedge Internal Medicine
HF prognosis differs according to iron deficiency definition
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hong Kong, U.S., Israeli data illuminate COVID vaccine myocarditis
MDedge Internal Medicine
‘Substantial’ CVD risks, burden up to a year after COVID-19
MDedge Internal Medicine
SCAI refines cardiogenic shock classification system
MDedge Internal Medicine