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Can you ask for your amputated limb back?
For example, while there almost universally doesn’t seem to be any laws saying you have rights to an amputated limb after a doctor removes it, in many cases you can ask for anything cut off of or removed from your body back from the hospital and they’ll (usually) say yes if pressed on the matter.
How do you dispose of an amputated limb?
The limb is sent to biohazard crematoria and destroyed. The limb is donated to a medical college for use in dissection and anatomy classes. On rare occasions when it is requested by the patient for religious or personal reasons, the limb will be provided to them. ‘
How do they dispose of body parts after surgery?
Patients often have the option to donate their limbs to science, however if they choose not to, hospitals will dispose of limbs as medical waste. Typically, once disposed of, body parts are incinerated. This is important to reduce the chances of contamination, but it is also done on parts with no known pathogens.
Can you cremate an amputated limb?
After surgery, the limbs are routinely incinerated as medical waste – but amputees say there should be more choices made available. Although according to section 9 of the Cremation Regulations Act 2008, you cannot cremate a limb from someone who is still alive – only from someone who has died – there are still choices.
Can you keep your own body parts after surgery?
Do all patients have the opportunity to keep their excised body parts? Generally, yes. Many hospitals are willing to return everything from tonsils to kneecaps. After a pathologist examines the removed parts and takes whatever samples are necessary for hospital records, the patients can often walk away with the rest.
Do all BIID patients want to amputate limbs?
Through the years, doctors have treated more and more patients, both men and women (but mostly men) who want to lose a limb. In 2012, a new study added a whole new dimension to BIID treatment and care. The study found that not all BIID patients actually want to amputate a limb.
What is amputation and how does it work?
Amputation is the surgical removal of all or part of a limb or extremity such as an arm, leg, foot, hand, toe, or finger.
Are there any hospitals in the UK that allow amputations?
The uproar around Smith’s decision was so intense that as of 2012, no hospital in Britain has allowed the amputation of a healthy limb. (It’s likely that no such amputations have taken place since 2000, but we could only find data going back to 2012.)
What are the risks of an amputation wound becoming infected?
Any wound from amputation or other surgery is at risk of becoming infected because the skin opening can allow germs or dirt to enter the bloodstream. Infections can cause tenderness or pain, fever, redness, swelling and/or discharge. These infections can lead to further complications or surgery or even death…