Dark History - 139: Dark History: Half Man… Half Pig?! The Bloody Truth Behind Organ Transplants
Episode Date: July 24, 2024Hi friends, happy Wednesday! I stumbled upon this wild story around 3am the other day. It's about Claire Sylvia, who faced serious heart issues and underwent a successful heart transplant. However, u...pon waking up, she suddenly craved beer and Chicken McNugget, things she had never really enjoyed. It turned out her donor, upon investigation, had a deep love for both. The more Claire learned about him, the more she realized she had adopted aspects of his personality. It got me thinking—does this phenomenon occur with every organ transplant? And now they're talking about using pig hearts—will we all start behaving like pigs next? So many questions! I appreciate you for coming by, and tune in next week for more Dark History. Want some cool Bailey Merch? Shop Dark History Merch: https://www.baileysarian.com _______ You can find the Dark History podcast on Apple, Spotify, wherever you listen to your podcasts, and every Thursday here on my YouTube for the visual side of things. Apple Podcast- https://www.apple.co/darkhistory Dark History Merch- https://www.baileysarian.com _______ FOLLOW ME AROUND Tik Tok: https://bit.ly/3e3jL9v Instagram: http://bit.ly/2nbO4PR Facebook: http://bit.ly/2mdZtK6 Twitter: http://bit.ly/2yT4BLV Pinterest: http://bit.ly/2mVpXnY Youtube: http://bit.ly/1HGw3Og Snapchat: https://bit.ly/3cC0V9d Discord: https://discord.gg/BaileySarian RECOMMEND A STORY HERE: cases4bailey@gmail.com Business Related Emails: baileysarianteam@wmeagency.com Business Related Mail: Bailey Sarian 4400 W. Riverside Dr., Ste 110-300 Burbank, CA 91505 ________ Go to https://www.Hungryroot.com/DARKHISTORY to get 40% off your first delivery and get your free veggies. Stop putting off those doctors appointments and go to https://www.Zocdoc.com/DARKHISTORY to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today. Get your first visit for only five dollars at https://www.Apostrophe.com/DARKHISTORY when you use our code: DARKHISTORY. Head to https://www.acorns.com/darkhistory or download the Acorns app to start saving and investing for your future today! Sign up for a free 30-day Audible trial and your first audiobook is free. Visit https://www.audible.com/DARK HISTORY
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Discussion (0)
So I read this wild story the other day, like three in the morning. It was about this woman named Claire
Sylvia. Now Claire, she was having some major heart issues so she had to get a heart transplant.
This is my prop. Thank you. The transplant was successful but I guess as soon as Claire woke up
she felt something was off. She had like, I guess all of a sudden this overwhelming desire for beer. I mean,
it's not that weird, but like it was weird for her because Claire had, she never cared
about beer before this. She wasn't even much of a drinker, but it didn't end there. Claire
was also dying to get her hands on some chicken McNuggets. Again, I'm like, what's the problem?
Nah, but like Claire, I guess she was very healthy,
never ate fast food, especially not McDonald's.
So it was like, what the hell is going on?
Like what happened to Claire?
Well, after some digging, she found out who her donor was.
And maybe you guessed it,
the donor was obsessed with beer and chicken nuggets.
And the more Claire found out about him,
the more she realized that like she had taken on
a lot of his personality.
I was like, ooh, weird.
I mean, does this happen to everyone
who gets an organ transplant?
And I'm hearing that they're putting pig hearts
in people now, so it's like,
are we gonna start acting like pigs? Maybe? I don't know. So many questions.
And today we are going to answer them. Welcome to the dark history of organ transplants.
Buckle up. It's gonna get a little weird.
Hi friends, I hope you're having a wonderful day today. My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to my podcast, Dark History.
Hi.
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All right, now let's get into it.
Organ transplants.
This is a heart.
If you're listening on the podcast, I am holding a heart.
It's been given to me as a prop
and I don't know what to do with it.
Hi, just popping in here really quick, ignore my face.
I just wanted to let you know
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And on YouTube, it'll be available August 8th.
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We need to do some further research on an episode.
Thank you so much.
Now let's get back to the story.
Let's talk about organ transplants
because they are actually way older than we realize.
In the year 1550 BC,
the first rumored transplant was written down into history.
It was actually called the Miracle of the Black Leg.
In the story, the Christian patron saints of medicine
and surgery, Saint Cosmas and Saint Damien,
performed leg surgery on a Roman deacon.
This deacon had cancer in one of his legs,
so the Christian saints removed his leg
and sewed on the leg of an Ethiopian man
who had recently died.
Now there's a lot of like controversy surrounding this story
because many believe it's actually not true,
but either way, it actually inspired generations of doctors
to get creative with organ transplants.
In 1817, a French physician named Henri de Trotet
wrote a letter to a French medical journal
about an interesting procedure he was told about.
Apparently over in India, a soldier in the army
had been very naughty, so naughty
that he was given the punishment
of having his nose cut off.
So the soldier was, of course, mortified.
So he went to an Indian surgeon in the area
to surgically reconstruct his nose.
Maybe you remember, but we did talk about this procedure
briefly in our plastic surgery episode, remember?
I'll link it down below if you wanna watch.
Anyways, but the soldier told the medical team
to do whatever they had to do to fix his nose.
So the medical team told him to turn around
and drop his pants.
And it sounds like a joke, but this is serious.
They said, drop your pants.
And they decided to get the skin needed
for his nose
from his butt cheeks.
Yeah, apparently he had,
you could say, you know, a full behind, you know?
This was their technique.
Okay, listen, they start smacking his butt
as hard as they could with an old shoe.
And the goal was to have the butt cheeks swell, okay?
Because if they swell,
you have more to work with, I guess, you know?
It sounds fake, but this is real.
This is history.
As soon as it was swollen enough, the team took a knife,
they cut out like a triangular piece of skin,
and then they surgically placed it on the man's nose.
So he's really like a butt face. Yeah, whoa. So they put it on the man's nose. So he's really like a butt face.
Yeah, whoa.
So they put it on the guy's face
and they seal the man's butt nose with plaster.
And ta-da, he was cured.
Apparently the man healed so well
that he was actually able to return to the army.
This story uncovered the incredible medical techniques
Indian doctors had been using for hundreds of years.
It's just kind of funny to imagine like your butt
on your face, but like no one has to know,
but we all know.
For the rest of the 1800s, most organ transplants
were exclusively skin related.
Your skin, if you don't know, high,
is the largest organ on your body.
Fun fact.
But doctors wanted to take the next step
and like go for something bigger.
So they went after the kidney.
In 1906, a surgeon named Dr. Matthew Jabouleh
performed the first ever kidney transplant in a human.
But there wasn't like a line of people
waiting to give up their perfectly good kidney, you know?
Everyday people thought the whole idea
of organ transplants was really morbid
and no one wanted to be a part of it.
So the surgeon turned to the animals he had near him.
The closest ones he had near him were a pig and a goat.
He's like, that's what I got to work with.
Pigs and goats, they were already part
of the food supply in the area.
So there were like a ton of them and they were available. They had nothing on their
schedule so he was like, you know, why not? Let's try this. Dr. Jabouleh put a
goat kidney in one person and then he took a pig kidney and put it in the
other person or another person. But sadly, both experiments were unsuccessful. Over
the next few years, several surgeons performed
over 100 versions of animal to human kidney transplants.
They even tried using monkey kidneys,
but the patients, unfortunately, they died right away.
In 1933, there was a Ukrainian doctor
named Dr. Yuri Voronoi who performed the first
successful human-to-human kidney transplant. To find successful you say
well they lived for a few days you know few days is better than nothing so
doctors you know they're like okay we're on to something though right so they
kept experimenting until finally,
it seemed like they had cracked the code.
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In 1954, there was a man named Richard Herrick
who was traveling home to Massachusetts
and he was rushing to get there because,
at just 23 years old, Richard was dying
from a rare kidney disease.
So he was receiving treatment at a local hospital,
but he only seemed to be getting worse.
It was kind of looking like there was no hope,
but there was this surgeon, Dr. Joseph Murray,
who was a surgeon and professor at Harvard.
He heard about his case, and he actually got really excited.
Dr. Murray knew Richard would be the perfect candidate
for his kidney transplant theory.
You see, Richard had an identical twin brother,
and Dr. Murray believed using one of his twin brother's
kidneys would be foolproof.
Richard and his brother knew he didn't really have
like any other options,
so they volunteered for this experimental surgery.
So they took the twin brother's kidney, plopped it in,
and it worked.
Richard became the first patient
to ever have a successfully transplanted organ.
He went on to marry one of his nurses
from the hospital he had the surgery at,
and they went on to have like two kids together.
And it just sounds like such a special lifetime movie,
right?
So until the 60s,
surgeons mostly focused on experimenting
with kidney transplants.
They were trying to perfect that organ transplant process
so they could move on to something else. And the results, I guess, were very hit or miss. But doctors kept getting creative when it came to
experimenting. There was a team at the University of Mississippi and they were conducting like
hundreds of lung transplant experiments on dogs. And after they finally succeeded, they tried the procedure on a patient, but using human lungs
instead.
Sadly, he died only a few weeks later.
But these doctors, they're saying to themselves, you know, Rome wasn't built in a day.
It was seven days.
And every doctor in the game was convinced that they had the best technique for how to
fix what went wrong after the surgery.
So the doctors, they just needed the human organs
to actually test it out on, right?
And they discovered that the best human organs
were the fresh ones.
In 1967, Dr. Christian Barnard was already a household name
in the scientific community.
I guess he had pioneered many open heart surgery techniques
and like other surgical procedures.
And he was kind of like a God
when it came to heart surgery.
But his true passion was heart transplants.
I guess until this point,
a heart transplant had never been done human to human.
Dr. Barnard and his brother
had been practicing
heart transplantation with dogs for years,
but he never had the right opportunity
to perform the procedure on a human.
And then in December, that same year,
an opportunity fell into his lap.
Dr. Barnard had been operating on a patient
with an incurable heart disease.
His condition was way too advanced
for fix-it surgery, so he didn't really have much much longer. And then at the same time,
there was a woman who was in her mid-20s. She was brought into the hospital. I guess she was in a
really bad car accident and like sadly she passed away, but her heart was still perfectly healthy.
So Dr. Barnard took advantage of this
and he didn't let the young woman's organs go to waste.
So he declared the patient brain dead,
detached her from the ventilator,
and then took out her heart.
Oh yes, he then put the heart into his other patient
who was dying and it was successful.
I guess it worked.
I mean, this was a groundbreaking moment.
Dr. Barnard had performed the world's first
heart transplant.
Well, did he though?
Because the man who received the heart
actually died 18 days later.
So would you say that was successful?
In his short time alive,
the patient who received the heart transplant
gave Dr. Barnard and his medical team,
I guess, very valuable information
so other patients could hopefully live longer.
Even though these surgeries were huge successes,
you can say,
there were some, I guess, like moral questions
that started to pop up, which is fair.
Just one month after Barnard's human heart transplant,
there was a man named Dr. Norman Shumway
who performed the first human heart transplant in the US.
And I guess it was like very controversial,
even for the doctors.
So during the surgery, the chief resident
who was assisting Dr. Shumway asked, quote,
"'Do you think this is really legal?
And then the doctor responded, I guess, we'll see.
I guess the problem was that like lines
were getting very blurred when it came
to where doctors were getting the organs.
There wasn't like a system in place, you could say.
At this time, you had a way for someone
to pop into the hospital and be either dying
or like they just died.
And if there was like a fresh heart or kidney or whatever,
some doctors would do anything to like get their hands on it.
Even if that meant like not getting
the patient's permission.
You know when you need to make an appointment
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history. On May 24th, 1968, there was a 54 year old man, his name was Bruce Tucker,
and I guess he was injured at work. So he fell off of a brick ledge and he suffered
a horrible head injury. So he was taken to the hospital for treatment, but sadly he ended
up passing away. On May 25th, like the very next day, the Medical College of Virginia decided
to not let Bruce's body go to waste.
So they sewed Bruce's heart into the chest
of like this guy who needed it,
who was like a rich business executive.
So this was like one of the first heart transplants
in the United States.
Therefore, it got a lot of media attention.
Plus on top of that,
it also gave the medical school funding.
After the transplant,
the Medical College of Virginia became known as the,
like the kings of organ transplant science.
But there was just one problem.
Technically,
they stole Bruce's heart.
I was thinking, well, Bruce is dead, you know,
and someone else needed a heart.
But no, because Bruce's heart. I was thinking, well, Bruce is dead, you know, and someone else needed a heart. But no, because Bruce's family, they didn't even know his organs had been
removed from his body until the funeral home like he went to, flagged it for them. They're
like, hey, he's missing some shit. I guess the funeral home told the family that there
was something off about Bruce's body. They're like, something's not right here because he's missing a kidney and a heart.
And I'm not a doctor, but I think you need those, you know?
So when Bruce's family hears this,
they're absolutely horrified.
They had not consented to his organs being donated.
And this, I guess, kind of opened up,
is that Pandora's box?
Because it showed or it uncovered a horrible trend
that was actually happening.
So at this time, I guess the area in Virginia,
it's called Richmond, everyone kind of knew,
but like, because they were known for like body snatching.
I guess like doctors in training,
they would wait for bodies, you know, bodies of dead people.
And then they would use them to practice
how to dissect on them, you know, do like doctor stuff.
And these doctors were actually known as resurrectionists.
And it's funny, you might be like, this sounds familiar
because we actually did another episode on this.
Look at us, just coming out with the greatest hits.
But I did an episode on this for Dark History
called the Doctors Riot, yeah, Doctors Riot,
all about body snatching and stuff.
It was wild.
Here's the thing about resurrectionists in Richmond,
I guess they weren't just waiting for any bodies.
The problem, the major problem,
was that they were specifically waiting
for bodies of black people.
Now, when it came to black working class people like Bruce,
the doctors, they knew they could get away with this.
In the 60s, it was very common for some doctors in Virginia
to treat their black patients
like they were experimental material for the hospital.
They knew at the time like black patients
didn't have the same legal protections as white patients.
And so they took advantage of that. I mean, shit, if it wasn't have the same legal protections as white patients, and so they took advantage of that.
I mean, shit, if it wasn't for the funeral home,
Bruce's family probably would have never found out
what happened, you know?
Well, Bruce's family did end up suing,
but after years in court,
I guess the jury sided with the doctors.
Aye, there was no justice for Bruce and his family.
And I mean, the doctors essentially had to face
no consequences for their actions.
And Bruce's story highlighted like the horror show
that was becoming organ transplants.
So for the next few decades,
things in the organ transplant industry
are a little chaotic.
They're just, again, no formal system.
They're just kinda guessing.
If a patient comes in and they need like a transplant,
they would look to a local organization.
And if they didn't have the organ that you were looking for,
it was like, sorry, Aunt Bertha, you are out of luck.
There's nothing here for you.
On October 19th, 1984, the federal government stepped in.
So they ended up approving a new proposition,
something called the National Organ Transplant Act.
So this was supposed to create a better system
of connecting organ donors to organ recipients.
And it also gave a person who died rights to their own body.
Because I guess like organ snatching was just common.
This is just what they did.
So this Oregon Transplant Act gave the family ownership
over their loved one's body
so they could decide what to do, right?
And even though this was like a good thing in the end,
there was still a massive shortage of organs
and people still had to jump through all kinds of
hoops to get a kidney or like a heart that they needed. And the list was growing longer and longer.
So doctors realized that maybe they should get creative and maybe they should go back to like
the old school way of things. So they decided to turn to something that was almost human. Something that seems like it made sense on paper.
I'm talking about animals.
They're like, let's go back to the animals.
The act of transplanting an animal organ into a human
is called xenotransplantation.
We already know that doctors had been experimenting
on animal organs, but it was never successful
when it came to animal organs
being put inside of humans.
In the past, doctors tried to transplant lamb, goat,
and I guess even rabbit organs inside humans.
And there was even a heart transplant surgery
between a baboon and a child.
But the patients, they would never live longer
than like a few days.
So these doctors decided to try for something
a little closer to a human.
How about a chimpanzee?
Kind of makes sense maybe if you squid?
I mean like, you know, do similar to us.
Plus experts say that their kidneys kind of work
just like ours and their organs are a similar size to ours.
And apparently they have a type A and type O blood types
just like us.
Doctors tried the chimpanzee kidney transplants
and I guess like the results, they weren't horrible.
Patients lived anywhere between 11 days and some even like nine months after surgery.
Now, again, to us simple humans, we're like, well, it's not working then.
OK. But to the doctors, they were like, this is a sign we're onto something.
Like we just have to keep trying.
I guess the answer, though though was not chimpanzees
because I guess they were too difficult to control
and the results just, they weren't paying off.
Also when the public found out about this,
people were very upset.
Oh yes, that, you know,
the chimps were being experimented on in this way.
But many doctors knew that they were very close
to xenotransplantation working.
So they were like, we just need to keep searching.
Yes, we do.
Now cut to 2023.
So the organ transplant crisis, you know, it isn't getting any better.
Currently there are over 100,000 Americans just waiting for an organ transplant.
Like doctors are racing against the clock
to get patients the organs that they need.
And they still believe like the key to fixing this issue
is to turn to animals.
Okay, great, let's brainstorm.
Can you guess like what animal they're gonna turn to next?
I was like giraffe?
Hippo?
I'll tell you after the break, come back.
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Now let's get back to the story.
The doctors, they turned to a pig.
I know, it sounds like out of all the animals, a pig.
All right, kind of came out of left field with that one.
But all right, so the doctors,
they chose the pig as their next test subject,
I guess for a couple of reasons.
One, pigs breed and give birth several times a year,
so there is a huge supply.
And most importantly,
pig organs are close to the same size as ours.
Plus, doctors have been repairing human hearts
by using the heart valve of a pig for, I guess, years now.
There's lots of medications that are,
there's blood thinner and allergy treatment,
and these things are made from pigs.
So it just kinda, I guess, made sense
to give pig hearts a try.
It's on the list.
They're like, just do it.
I don't know.
Pigs are smart and they're very lovable
and cuddly and so cute.
But I'm not saying this, but they were like,
people don't seem to care about pigs
as much as they do chimpanzees. So they won't really care.
So the public, they were like, okay, whatever.
Like I eat bacon, so go for it.
So the very first pig heart transplant,
I guess happened in January of 2022.
I know.
I think we were just preoccupied
with the fact that like COVID was going on.
So we probably didn't even notice
that they were doing pig heart transplants.
You know, that's probably why it just breezed right past us.
But they did it.
A man named David Bennett, I guess he volunteered for it.
He was brave.
He was like, I'll do it.
David was an end stage heart failure
and like, you know, nowhere near the top of the list
to receive a heart transplant.
So when doctors gave him like this option
for a little more time, he decided,
eff it, now I'm gonna do it, I'm gonna take the chance.
So after hours of surgery, David made it out alive.
And to everyone's shock,
the pig heart transplant was a success.
Suddenly tens of thousands of people
on the waiting list for a heart had hope.
I mean, maybe they didn't have to wait
on the transplant list forever.
So the press was all over this and it seemed like maybe
the future of heart transplants was here.
Nope, just kidding because David died unexpectedly
two months later from heart failure.
Doctors discovered after his death that actually there was a virus that was within
the transplanted pig heart called PCMV. So maybe it wasn't the heart, it was maybe the virus, you
know? And I guess this virus, it activated once it got into David's body and like I guess that's what
caused the heart to fail. But after this, I mean, there was now even more paranoia
surrounding xenotransplantation.
But of course, that's not gonna stop people
from signing up for the pig heart.
I mean, hell, maybe it'll work, you know?
It's better, I'd rather get an extra two months
than nothing, right?
In 2023, a man named Larry Fawcett,
he signed up to get a pig heart.
So I guess the disease, the heart disease that he had,
it would reject a typical heart transplant right away.
So when he was given the lifeline of the pig heart,
he's like, let's go, let's do this shit.
September 20th, 2023,
Larry underwent the pig heart transplant.
And just like with David Bennett,
the media was all over it.
Larry made it out of surgery alive.
And after some testing,
the doctors declared his surgery was a success.
So as soon as Larry woke up,
he asked the surgeon for a t-shirt.
Well, I'm sure he asked for other things first, okay?
But this was like one of the things he asked for.
He asked for a t-shirt that said,
just call me Wilbur.
And we're like, ha ha ha ha ha ha.
You know, he's in good spirits.
And he was thrilled to be given like another chance at life.
But sadly, I know there are complications. About a month later
I guess Larry's heart didn't seem to be doing too well. So doctors they were speaking with him like
every single day and it was becoming clear that the amount of blood his heart was pumping just was not
enough. So they placed him on an ECMO which is a heart lung bypass machine that helps pump your heart.
But Larry knew, he knew it wouldn't be enough.
Eventually he told his doctors that he would like
to be removed from the machine.
It's so sad.
So I guess it was said that Larry wasn't crying
through his last days on earth.
He spent the rest of his time joking
and reminiscing with family and friends.
And his wife said, quote, he got to say those things that you don't get to say to people
because you always think you have more time. Aww. That's true, but it's sad. Well Larry ended up
passing away on October 30th, 2023. And this was about six weeks after the surgery. People like Larry give hope to the xenotransplantation community
and quote unquote success stories like his
also drive the organ transplant community
to figure out like how to fix the problem.
Like they're onto something, they're just not fully there.
A big part of this community
is a company called Revivacore.
Sounds sketchy, huh?
What are they doing?
Well, let me tell you.
This company is essentially a research farm
that experiments on animals with one goal in mind,
animal to human organ transplants.
The farm has two buildings,
and there's like a lot of pigs there, like around 300,
and they're all for research purposes.
And they're not just using any pig.
They are using like the Rolls Royce of pigs.
Oh yes,
these pigs are actually specially designed and cloned pigs.
This way they can make sure that the pig hearts function properly. And again,
they don't have any viruses.
Dr. David Ayers who runs the company said quote,
It's exciting. We've been working on this for more than 20 years and it's no longer a science
fiction experiment. It's actually a reality. Wow. I know. Every day the farm is said to get closer
to perfecting the pig transplants. But like everything we do, there's still a lot of risk.
Many doctors are concerned humans with like animal organs
will somehow take on those animal viruses
and you know, then pass them on to other humans
and bada bing, bada boom.
It's a shit storm.
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history. You know what I've been listening to on Audible this month? In Cold Blood by Truman Capote.
I read it and I was like, I want to listen on Audible. So it takes place in November of 1959 in the small town of Holcomb, Kansas, okay, where four members of the Clutter
family were savagely murdered. It's a true story. There was like no apparent motive for
the crime and there were almost no clues. So this was one of the first non-fiction novels ever written
and Truman Capote goes into great detail
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And then plus there's the ethics of it all. I mean besides
cloning and breeding some pigs from the farm, some believe that they're also
kind of playing God by changing a pig's DNA. They're actually using the same
techniques that they used on Dolly the sheep. Do you know who Dolly the sheep is?
I know, neither did I. I forgot about this story, but it was real. I guess in 1996, Dolly the sheep was like
the very first successfully cloned sheep
to ever be made by humans.
Again, this was very controversial because, you know,
who do these scientists think they are?
They just like, are they God?
Well, but scientists use the Dolly cloning technique
to essentially edit out all of the malfunctions
that happen when a pig heart is put into a human. Now this way there won't be issues like blood
clots, you know, or stuff like that. That's all I can think of. Blood clots. Because so many people
are upset over the whole concept, they won't even like look at the benefits. A bioethicist named Dr. L. Sid Johnson
is a concerned person, okay?
She said, quote,
"'The risk could really be catastrophic
"'from a novel mutated virus that might infect a human.'"
Dr. Johnson and other doctors also are calling out
the fact that creating, breeding,
and sacrificing
thousands of pigs every year just to harvest their organs is cruel.
Quote, they're treated like machines for the sole purpose of being disassembled to
provide spare parts for humans.
End quote.
And you can say, yes, that is exactly what they are doing.
Like whether you agree with Dr. Johnson or agree with the clone scientists, one thing is clear. We are running out of organs. In 2023 around 46,000
transplants took place. So over half of the people on the waiting list just don't have
good odds. So what happens then? Well, that brings us to the black market.
Black market, black market, black market.
In Canada, it's estimated that like the average wait time
for a kidney is four years.
And some people wait as long as seven years.
And the United States, the average wait time for a kidney
is around three and a half years.
But some people, you know, they're not able to wait.
They need a kidney now or like they're gonna die.
Because of that, some people start to kind of take matters
into their own hands by turning to the black market.
You know, the black market for organ transplants isn't new.
I remember as a kid, like you would hear like,
oh, you're gonna get kidnapped
and your organs are gonna be sold on the black market.
Which is such a weird thing to say as a kid.
Like, how did we even know that?
Hmm, I don't know, it was like a fear back then.
I don't know what that was about.
So if we go back to like the 1980s,
people were looking for ways
around all of the government regulations.
No one wanted to wait on this long list
to maybe get an organ.
So people were like, let's just do it ourselves.
And human organ trafficking popped off.
And I guess since then it's really only gotten bigger.
There's this company,
it's called Global Financial Integrity, GFI.
They have been like fighting
this black market situation for years.
They estimate that like 10% of all organ transplants
are done via trafficked organs.
I guess it's an industry that's in the billions.
The most popular organ on the black market is the kidney.
It's said that over 10,000 kidneys are traded
on the black market worldwide every year.
And if you do the math, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop,
that's like one kidney every hour.
So politicians, they don't usually talk about
this type of trafficking because, you you know it's not very exciting. It doesn't really grab attention like sex trafficking does.
But I think you and I can agree that it's important and kind of spooky. There's not really like a ton
of law enforcement surrounding human organ trafficking and in some countries I guess it's
run by like the most elite of organized criminals. What I just learned right now five seconds ago, you can sell your organs to the black market.
Yeah, you can actually be like, here's my kidney, like, you know, and people will do so because,
you know, they need money, or maybe they owe a lot of money to like these organized
criminals or something. Usually though, like if you do end up selling your kidney on the black market,
you kind of get ripped off. Like sometimes they'll like give up the the organ and they won't get the payment yet.
Or they won't get the payment in full.
You'll get half up front or something, you know, and then you'll never see them again.
It's been reported that like over 80% of organ sellers don't receive the money that they were promised.
With all that being said, I guess the question is, what the hell do we
do? Many experts in the field of organ donation believe that the solution is to start with the
root of the problem, the transplant list. As of 2024, I guess there are over like 103,000 people
on the waiting list and every eight eight minutes, another person is added
to the list.
There's this company called the United Network
for Organ Sharing,
AKA U-N-O-S.
They have been in charge of the organ donation program
for like 40 years.
And I guess they match people on the transplant list
with donor organs
by coordinating with like other hospitals
and donation groups.
But like this company has control over the whole
organ transplant process.
So no new systems are allowed in to like improve it
or make adjustments or something.
I guess all that's about to change as of now.
This system is up for bid,
meaning someone is allowed to come in by the program.
Hopefully make it better, but this is dark history
and I'm sure someone could also eff it up.
I think we can all agree that the system is broken.
Or maybe it was never right.
I don't know, but thousands of people are being added to
the organ transplant list like every single year. It's sad. They don't know if they're going to get
matched. And in 2024 it feels like maybe by now we would have it figured out. But obviously we don't.
But it's like what else are they supposed to do? You know? And people are like well what about the
pig farms? What about the pigs? It's like I don't know. I don't know, I don't know. And we know that when human lives are on the line, unfortunately,
a lot of the times some lives will be lost.
So next week, we're going to dive into a topic that every single
one of us probably has a touch point with.
Some people love to talk about it.
Some people would literally want to talk about anything else.
The Puritans used to throw ragers when this happened. President
Lincoln inspired an entire country to pump their bodies full of chemicals because of
it. And now more than ever, there are controversial industries popping up all around it.
Next week we're going to be talking about death. Whoa, I know that's dark. But like
all the shitty stuff that happens around when you die. So next week we're going to be talking about death. Whoa, I know that's dark, but like all the shitty stuff that happens around when you die.
So next week we'll be diving into the dark history of the funeral industrial complex.
Or like the dark history of death. I haven't decided yet. Let me know which title I should go with.
Well friends, thank you for hanging out with me today. What'd you learn?
Yeah, me too. Hey, did you know you can join me over on my YouTube
where you can actually watch these episodes?
Oh, yeah, on Thursday. It's like after the podcast airs.
And while you're there, you can also catch my murder mystery makeup.
That's on Mondays.
And, like, don't forget to subscribe and stuff
because I'm here for you weekly with new content.
I'd love to hear your guys' reactions to today's story.
So leave me a comment.
Let me know what you're saying, what you want to talk about. Maybe you have experience with
the organ transplants. Maybe you're selling them on the black market. Now let's read a couple of
comments you guys left me. Yay! Let's just do this. Let's just do a whole episode of me reading
comments. So Katie, the psychic lady 2342,
she left me a comment saying Joan needs some earrings
and other accessories.
Don't tell her that.
It'll go straight to Joan's head.
I mean, she takes things very personally.
Now she's gonna go home and cry.
You feel good about that, Katie?
You're getting bullied.
Meg or Meg, Shuda6624 left a comment on our challenger episode.
We need an audio clip of the ooh somebody's in trouble and make it a ringtone for the
boss lol.
Bailey you slay me.
Hey how do I make it into a ringtone?
Let me know down below.
I mean I would use that for my ringtone.
Uh smoothie queen I already like you.
Smoothie Queen 42 left us an episode suggestion saying,
Bailey, you're the best.
Do you think you could do a video
on Australian forced adoption era?
Well, Smoothie Queen, thank you, first of all.
That was very nice of you.
Second of all, I've never heard about this.
So I've got a lot of questions thus far.
I will do some googling and googling.
I actually tried to do an episode,
like it was gonna be the dark history of Australia,
but then it got complicated.
So maybe I'll look into this instead, huh?
Thank you for the suggestion.
I'll look into it, I'll probably stay up all night
researching it, and I'll let you know. I'll probably stay up all night researching it
and I'll let you know.
I love you.
Thank you so much for watching
and I appreciate you for, you know, hanging out, engaging.
Keep commenting because maybe next episode
I will feature your comment, huh?
Maybe I won't, but maybe I will.
And hey, if you don't know,
Dark History is an audio boom original.
Special thank you to our expert, Dr. Heather Dewey-Hagborg.
And I'm your host, hi, Bailey Sarian.
I hope we have a good rest of your day.
You make good choices, and I'll be talking to you next week.
Goodbye.
I'm sorry.