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James D. Hardy : Getting To The Heart Of The Matter

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Getting to the Heart of the Matter What is the first thing that comes to mind when hearing the word Mississippi? No shoes? Poor? All stupid? Cowboys? Stereotypes go a long way and everyone has them. Mississippi is just like everyone else and can accomplish goals that most could not. Dr. James D. Hardy was one of these Mississippians who accomplish many hard goals. Hardy was the first doctor ever to perform the first heart and lung transplant in the world. Getting to the heart or the lungs takes education and practice. Being a doctor is not easy, and that why it is important to have the education and practice. James hardy grew up in Newala, Alabama, which was about thirty-five minutes from Birmingham. He graduated from the University …show more content…

“In 1984, Baby Fae received a baboon heart at Loma Linda University Medical Center in California, and she lived for 20 days. After the failed chimpanzee transplant, Dr. Hardy continued research, and in 1987 his team transplanted a pair of lungs into a 29-year-old patient, leaving the heart in place.” Cooley. Many people did not agree with animal organs being in there bodies. The event brought criticism from all quarters—legal, ethical, moral, religious, financial, and governmental. On January 23,196, Boyd Rush, the patient Hardy has identified as a heart recipient, was dying of heart failure. Because of difficulties in obtaining a donor human heart, however, Hardy decided to proceed with a chimpanzee’s heart, which beat for ninety minutes before failing. Hardy then had prepared himself for a certain amount of criticism, but he thought most of it would come from the general public. He was defamed at national surgical meetings and his clinical works was questioned. The criticism omitted after Journal of the American Medical Association published a June 1964 paper where Hardy detailed the strict guidelines he used in selecting both donor and recipient, his work in the labs leading up to transplant, and the strong scientific basis for the act. A national moratorium on organ transplantation followed Hardy’s heart transplant because doctors still has to overcome the problem of organ rejection, but his pioneering work played a vital role

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