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Relatives of Organ Donors Are 'Perpetually Silenced,' Says Anthropologist Lesley Sharp

Lesley Sharp, whose specialty is research on organ donors, was interviewed for the Chronicle of Higher Education's Verbatim section by reporter Peter Monaghan. The following article is reprinted with permission of The Chronicle of Higher Education from its issue of Dec. 1, 2000.

Book Aims to Give a Voice to Relatives of Organ Donors
By PETER MONAGHAN

The relatives of organ donors are "perpetually silenced," says Lesley A. Sharp, an assistant professor of anthropology at Barnard College. "Quite literally, people do not want them to speak," she says. Ms. Sharp is writing a book on their effort to combat the anonymity of transplants through such practices as setting up Internet-based "cemeteries" to commemorate the dead and identify their beneficiaries.

Q. How are the relatives silenced?

A. Donor kin are assumed [by transplantation professionals] to be extremely volatile, emotionally. They're literally described as dangerous people who might attack the recipient. At presentations -- for example, annual memorial events at hospitals where you thank your donor family -- the organizers really manage donor kin very carefully, because they don't want them to speak about the tragedies, about the deaths.

Q. What other public commemorations are appearing?

A. There are transplant Olympics that are held every other year in this country. Until recently, they were almost exclusively for organ recipients, to celebrate that they had survived and were healthy. Only a few years ago did donor kin in large numbers become involved. So, a big question for the organizers is, should they be in the same building, should they actually cross paths?

Q. Should they?

A. I only know of a few exceptions where it was a mistake - one involved a family of color who met the recipient and the recipient was racist, and was horrified and would have nothing to do with the family afterwards. It was extremely painful for the donor family. But in general what happens is that these become very involved relationships. They're not easy ones, but they're very moving tales about, well, what do you do once you meet each other and what are your obligations to one another as social beings?

Q. What do transplant professionals say about such meetings?

A. That varies radically... . It's difficult to prohibit it, because letter writing is considered a fairly normal thing these days, which it wasn't 10 years ago. Now, after you get your transplant and you're out of the hospital, the procurement professionals really let you know that it's not nice if you don't write a thank-you note... . But professionals read the mail, regularly, and edit material, cross out names and addresses, consistently.

Q. Don't they often paint donors as young cancer victims when in fact many have been killed in gang violence?

A. Yes. Somewhere around 10 percent of donors, in some places more, are victims of gun violence... . No one wants to talk about this aspect of it, either, because again that undermines the idea of who these young victims are.

Copyright (c) 2000 by The Chronicle of Higher Education. Posted with permission on www.barnard.edu. This article may not be published, reposted, or redistributed without express permission from The Chronicle. To obtain such permission, please send a message to permission@chronicle.com. For subscription information, send a message to circulation@chronicle.com.

 

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