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Funeral Consumer Alliance of Connecticut
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FCA of CT Article
[ Home ] [ Articles and Pamphlets ] A GIFT TO MEDICAL EDUCATION AND THE NEXT GENERATION Less publicized is
the continuing need for bodies for medical research and education. Both Yale
Medical School and the University of Connecticut Medical School report ongoing
demands for bodies, particularly for anatomy classes. Body donation meets the FCA
principles of a “meaningful, affordable, dignified” decision. The gift is
essential for medical teaching and learning. As one Yale medical student wrote:
“What we learned is due to her and could not have come from textbooks. She was
our first teacher in medicine, and we learned more from her than from any other
teacher during our first year in medical school.” Body donation is
clearly affordable and, indeed, of no cost to the donor or kin as the medical
school will cover the cost of transportation to the school and the subsequent
cremation. The return of the ashes,
if requested, is usually paid by the estate. Contrary to some
fears, body donation is also a dignified, respectful process. As one student
wrote: “we had the privilege of working with the donor and appreciate her
decision to help the donor and appreciate her decision to help
us learn. We want you to know that we have the utmost respect for her.
Not all of us are religious, but those that are
prayed for her. When the course ended, we sent a check in her memory to
the Leukemia Society to show our gratitude.” Some medical
conditions preclude acceptance for body donation, so it is a good idea to have
an alternate plan, perhaps direct burial or cremation. Conditions that make a
body unacceptable include infectious disease, (small pox, AIDS, measles,
hepatitis) autopsy, severe accident, obesity, or out-of-state death. Our FCA office has
forms for both Yale and U. Conn. Medical Schools as well as a brief pamphlet on
body donation. We recommend that those considering this gift, complete and send
in the form to the designated school, probably
the nearest school. At death, the medical school should be contacted directly
and it will arrange for a medical examiner to examine the body and, if suitable,
to arrange for transportation. There is no need to contact or to use a funeral
home, a factor which tends to make morticians oppose donations. If requested in
advance, the ashes are returned to the family after the body has been used and
cremated. Otherwise, the medical school will arrange a communal burial at the
school. Those who decide to
donate their bodies to a medical school agree that this is an affordable,
dignified, and meaningful choice. As one widow said, “He did his final thing
for humanity and it was a wonderful thing to do.” Another donor noted both the
altruistic and practical motives: “My soul will be gone and maybe my body can
help some other people. Besides, it is the ultimate in recycling and it’s a
cheap way to get out of this world.” [ Home ] [ Articles and Pamphlets ] |