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7Since in RealLife organ donation is still an opt-in process in most countries (i.e., you have to sign up to become an eligible donor), lots more people need transplants than there are organs. RuleOfDrama means that this pops up quite a bit in medical and crime shows. Often a {{Determinator}} parent will do whatever it takes to get the LittlestCancerPatient the organ he or she needs, especially if the person ahead of him is a RichBitch who ruined her body by hard living. Less often the RichBitch learns AnAesop about how precious life is and to open her heart to others (especially if said heart was what got transplanted). Even more rare are incidents in which the organ doesn't take (unless the series is a medical drama); in horror movies, however, the biggest side effect is an increased risk of GrandTheftMe or any other kind of BodyHorror.
8
9Related tropes: BloodTransfusionPlot and OrganTheft. Compare SavedByThePhlebotinum.
10
11Sister trope to HealthcareMotivation.
12----
13!!Examples:
14
15[[foldercontrol]]
16
17[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
18* ''Anime/AngelBeats'' reveals in episode nine that [[spoiler:just moments before Otonashi died he signed a donor card, in the hopes his death wouldn't be in vain]]. It's shown in episode 13 that [[spoiler:indeed, it wasn't in vain as Kanade has his heart]].
19* In ''Manga/BokuNoHatsukoiWoKimiNiSasagu'', main character Takuma suffers of a heart disease. [[spoiler: Eventually, the condition for Takuma to get better is to get a heart transplant. Kou gets appointed as the donor, but both Takuma and Kou's family reject it.]]
20* In ''Literature/TheCaseFilesOfJewelerRichard'', it's revealed that Vincent Leung married his wife to avoid suspicion of organ trafficking or unsavory reasons when he donated her his kidney. Seems like a case of Thou Doth Protest Too Much.
21* [[spoiler:Adorea]] of ''Manga/FrankenFran'' has this in her backstory: she and her boyfriend had life-threatening illnesses, and they each promised they would give their organs to the other should one of them pass away. [[spoiler:The boyfriend died first, so Fran's father donated the organs to Adorea before working his magic on the boyfriend to revive him; the callous boyfriend demanded the organs back, turning Adorea into the... uh... [[WalkingTransplant "person"]] who she is now.]]
22* One of the murderers in ''Manga/TheKindaichiCaseFiles'' has trying to find a matching kidney for his sick daughter in his backstory -- he got involved in the OrganTheft business, and the man he murdered found out and was blackmailing him over this.
23* In ''Manga/PetShopOfHorrors'', the dictator of a country is hiding out in America and is in need of an organ transplant. The doctors decide to use the heart of a baboon to do the job, only for said baboon to be kidnapped. Cue a mad rush to find the thing, for fear of sparking a messy political situation. [[spoiler:Then it turns out that the kidnapper is a man whose daughter also needs a heart transplant. The dictator winds up being sniped by someone from his country and they end up giving the baboon's heart to the girl after all. Oh, and there's a subplot where D is apparently suffering from some disease and his "sister" is sent by their father to give her dear brother any of her organs or body parts to cure him. She herself is actually a baboon and is killed by the shop's pets when D refuses to accept her offer and she attacks him.]] Needless to say, it was a creepy story.
24* A running theme in ''Anime/RayTheAnimation'' and the manga which it is based on. Ray herself was raised on a farm designed to provide [[OrganTheft black market organs]]; this was how she lost her [[EyeScream eyes]], only to have them replaced by [[XRayVision X-ray eyes]].
25* Purely hypothetical in ''Manga/StrawberryMarshmallow'': Miu is claiming that her friendship with Chika is closer than that of Ana and Matsuri. One test is what one friend would do if the other needed the first's organs. Matsuri and Ana would definitely do so, even though Matsuri asks what would happen to her if she were the donor (Matsuri seems to forget for a moment that it ''is'' hypothetical and starts crying); Chika is more ambivalent but comes to the conclusion that she "probably" would, provided that she herself would live. Miu claims that "there's no way I'm giving you any of my organs, though".
26* In ''Manga/TokyoBabylon'', [[DelicateAndSickly Yuya]] had an unidentified kidney disorder, which had already killed his twin older sister Maya. Even though his condition kept worsening to the point of emergency surgery he was ''still'' on the waiting list, so Subaru eventually decides to donate his own kidney to Yuya. [[spoiler:He arrives just after Yuya's taken to emergency surgery again, and Yuya's unnamed mother flips out and attacks him. Seishiro blocks the knife, and Subaru is too upset to do anything. The plotline is never resolved.]]
27[[/folder]]
28
29[[folder:Fan Fiction]]
30* ''Fanfic/MyLittleTitan'': Part of Rainbow Dash's backstory, shared by her counterpart in ''[[https://www.fimfiction.net/story/89227/the-perfect-match The Perfect Match]]'', a fic by the same author. In both stories, when Rainbow Dash was a filly, she came down with a viral disease that attacks and destroys the kidneys and would have died without a donor kidney. Her life was saved when Fluttershy had herself tested, turned out to be a perfect match, and [[DeathGlare Stared]] the doctors and her parents into letting her donate.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
34* In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanAndMisterFreezeSubZero'', Mr. Freeze's wife Nora will die without an organ transplant. They get through the movie without ever specifying which organ it is that she needs; it's implied that she needs several. [[spoiler:It turns out a compatible donor... happens to be Barbara Gordon, a.k.a. Batgirl. By the end of the movie, Nora is saved, thanks to Wayne Enterprise assistance.]]
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
38* In ''Film/{{Airplane}}'', one of the passengers is being flown to receive a new heart.
39* This happens in ''Film/Awake2007'' when [[spoiler:Clay's mother kills herself in the hospital waiting room to assure he gets a healthy heart]].
40* ''Film/BloodWork'' has a detective investigating the murder of the woman whose heart he got.
41* The plot of ''Film/DumbAndDumberTo'' is jumpstarted by Harry requiring a kidney transplant and needing to find his long-lost daughter to obtain one. [[spoiler:It turns out that Harry was faking the whole time, to get back at Lloyd's overlong mental institution prank.]]
42* In ''Film/TheEye'', a woman receives an eye transplant that helps her see into the supernatural.
43* A villainous example in ''Film/GetTheGringo'' as it is Javi who needs a liver transplant and has been keeping the Kid alive for when he needs it. In addition, it is stated that he had already murdered the Kid's father for his liver some time ago.
44* ''Film/{{Gods}}'', being about pioneer heart transplant, naturally features this.
45* ''Film/JohnQ'' has the title character taking a hospital's emergency room hostage to get his son a heart transplant he can't afford to pay for and his insurance refuses to cover. Further, when there's no suitable donor heart available, he starts planning to kill himself to provide one. [[spoiler:He's stopped seconds before he pulls the trigger, when one suddenly becomes available.]]
46* A gay French shorts called ''La dérade'' has a variation of this as the main plot. Simon is in need of heart transplant and hides his condition from his lover, a sailor named François. [[spoiler:He does get a donor for transplant in the end, but it comes from François who dies after a car crash when he is on the way to his five-week sailing duty to South Africa. The shorts tells the aftermath of the transplant [[TheLostLenore when Simon is still grieving over François' death as he has a hallucination of talking to François]].]]
47* One of the subplots in ''Film/MercenariesFromHongKong'' has one of the mercenaries, Sergeant Tai, needing to raise funds for his little ill daughter, who needs a kidney transplant in an expensive procedure available only in the US which Tai cannot afford (hence his acceptance of a SuicideMission). Unfortunately the Sergeant dies partway through the film, and it's up to his best friend, the protagonist Luo Li to continue his mission.
48* In the German short ''Film/PigHeart'', 13 year old Elli (Creator/AnukSteffen) has a severe heart disease and is in need of a transplant. There's no donor around and the main drama is the fact that, as a vegan, she refuses to get a pig's heart, not wanting an animal to be killed for her to live on.
49* In ''Film/ReturnToMe'', the female lead's recent heart transplant provides some major plot [[spoiler: when she finds out the guy she's dating is the donor's widower]].
50* ''Film/SevenPounds'' is about TheAtoner looking for [[spoiler:worthy recipients of his organs before he commits suicide]].
51* Science fiction variant in ''Franchise/StarWars'': When [=R2D2=] returns from the attack on the Death Star with some structural damage, [=C3PO=] offers to donate any of his circuits or gears that might be needed to repair his companion. Awwww....
52* The Creator/LucBesson produced and written French film ''Yamakasi'' is about the namesake group of practitioners of LeParkour (the actors themselves came up with the word), who do it illegally. A young boy with heart problems tries to imitate them one day, and falls unconscious and in need of a heart transplant as a result. Feeling guilty, the Yamakasi decide to gather enough money to pay him a transplant, by using their Parkour skills to break into the houses of rich doctors and [[JustLikeRobinHood stealing them money and goods]].
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Literature]]
56* This is the backstory in ''Literature/BloodWork'', in which an FBI profiler gets the heart from a murder victim. He ends up solving the case. It turns out that [[spoiler:the serial killer was killing compatible donors for him]].
57* The ''Literature/KnownSpace'' story ''The Defenseless Dead'' has a law being debated which will enable those in [[HumanPopsicle cold storage]] to be harvested for their organs. While this will undercut the illegal OrganTheft trade, the detective protagonist is still horrified, especially when he suspects that some former organleggers are planning their own scheme so as to make money regardless.
58* This is a very common plot Creator/LurleneMcDaniel's stories:
59** In ''Let Him Live'', the heroine befriends and falls in love with a boy who desperately needs a liver transplant. [[spoiler:He doesn't make it.]]
60** ''She Died Too Young'' has the complication of a heart being available, but ''two'' girls need a transplant. [[spoiler:The heroine of that particular book gets the heart while the other girl dies.]]
61** Katie O'Roark gets a heart transplant in her debut book. [[spoiler:She survives to the end of the ''One Last Wish'' series and gets married to her longtime boyfriend.]]
62** The short story "Laura's Heart" has heroine Laura receive the heart of a boy she fell in love with, who was gunned down. [[spoiler:He had a feeling his death was imminent, as he'd escaped a gang, and signed the donor forms in advance.]]
63* This trope, plus WalkingTransplant, plus [[CallingTheOldManOut Calling the Old Woman Out]] sparks the plot of ''Literature/MySistersKeeper''. The girl was conceived and born so that she would provide organ donations to her ill sister.
64* ''Literature/NeverLetMeGo'' starts off as a slightly creepy story about some kids in a boarding school. About a quarter of the way through we find out that the kids are clones being raised to provide organs. By the end we find out that most clones are indoctrinated so much that they keep giving organs until they end up comatose organ mines.
65* This turns out to be the basic underlying scheme in ''Literature/StrangeAffair'' by Creator/PeterRobinson.
66* ''{{Literature/Soonish}}'' goes into some detail about the ethical questions of organ transplantingin the chapter about 3D-printing organs, including the "does this person actually deserve a new organ when they destroyed their own through bad life choices" question.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
70* ''Series/ThirtyRock'' gives us the entire episode "Kidney Now!", in which Jack Donaghy, having found his biological father Milton Green, discovers that Green needs a kidney transplant. Since he himself is incompatible, he organizes a benefit concert by blackmailing a bunch of celebrities to sing on national television in the hopes that it might convince someone to donate a compatible kidney.
71* In one episode of ''Series/BabylonFive'', Londo ends up needing a blood transfusion but [[ABNegative has a very rare blood type]]. He is saved by a transfusion from his wife Timov (who states that blood type is the ''only'' thing they have in common). While she gets Dr Franklin to promise to not say where the blood came from, the spin-off novels set after the series state that he eventually figured it out.
72* ''Series/ChicagoHope'' has a few episodes dealing with this.
73** A first season episode has a man whose brother needs a heart transplant but is far down on the donor list. He finds a gun and then proceeds to take the OR and its staff hostage ''during an operation'' to get the heart to go to his brother.
74** Another episode deals with a white racist who needs a heart transplant, but the donor heart that comes available is from a black teenager. The man dies because [[spoiler:the nurse assigned to him is Asian-American, and he threatens to have his friends rape her. [[DeathByRacism She's so afraid of him that she never takes blood samples from him, which would have shown that he's not a good match for that heart]]]].
75* ''Series/CriminalMinds'': One episode has victims being "underkilled" (shot with glancing blows that leave them clinging to life) and left at places symbolic of rescue (like an ER parking lot). The BAU ponders the implications for a while before realizing that it's practical: all of the victims are organ donors, and the unsub wants them to be brain-dead but viable for transplant because his daughter needs a kidney. When she still fails to get one, he resorts to murdering someone ahead of her on the list. In the end, [[spoiler:he kills ''himself'', since he was a match but unsuitable for a living donation due to his own health problems]].
76* ''Series/{{CSI}}'':
77** One episode centers around a family with an ill son whose younger sister was conceived [[WalkingTransplant for the express purpose of finding a match for a bone marrow transplant]].
78** A [[OrganTheft black bone/tissue market]] is discovered in one episode. Strange objects, such as umbrellas, are found inside corpses, used to replace the harvested bones.
79* In the ''Series/CSICyber'' episode "Fit-and-Run", the criminals turn out to be [[spoiler:a husband-father duo desperately searching for a replacement kidney for their dying wife/daughter, who suffers from a genetic kidney disease and has been deemed inoperable. By the time the team tracks them down, the father (a recently retired army surgeon) [[TheBadGuyWins has already succeeded transplanting a kidney from an involuntary donor into his daughter]], but since the duo made sure to target young people in good physical health who also had the correct blood type, the donor and the daughter both live as the husband and father are arrested.]]
80* The ''Series/{{CSINY}}'' episode "[[Recap/CSINYS02E18 Live or Let Die]]" has a variation with the doctor's wife needing the liver. He orchestrates a medical helicopter hijacking and kills several people in the process. Mac is naturally not amused, especially recalling his own pain and loss, and tells the guy he will likely be in prison when his wife dies.
81* In ''Series/CurbYourEnthusiasm'', Richard Lewis is in need of a kidney. Larry and Jeff find out that both their kidneys are compatible and compete to see who will give the kidney. Larry ends up giving it in the season finale.
82* ''Series/EarthFinalConflict'': Liam Kincaid anonymously donates blood to Ronald Sandoval. Notable because the doctor said it ''had'' to be from a first-degree relative (parent or child) to work. Furthermore, Sandoval considers Liam his enemy while Liam's feelings for his human father are a little more complicated.
83* A final season plotline of ''Series/{{ER}}'' has John Carter in renal failure due to both injuries he received when stabbed nine years prior and an infection he picked up while working in Africa. He finally receives a kidney towards the end of the season.
84* The ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' two-part story "[[Recap/FarscapeS01E19Nerve Nerve]]"/"[[Recap/FarscapeS01E20TheHiddenMemory The Hidden Memory]]" initially involves Aeryn needing a nerve graft to save her life after an injury she gets in [[Recap/FarscapeS01E18ABugsLife the previous episode]].
85* In the third season of ''Series/ForeverKnight'', Nick and co investigate a black-market organ ring. Natalie is scheduled for a knee surgery and has the misfortune to have a doctor who's connected to it somehow and who's the mother of a girl who needs a heart transplant. She nearly ends up an [[OrganTheft unwilling donor]], but Nick gets there just in time.
86* ''Series/GeneralHospital'': Seven-year-old B.J. Jones is left brain dead after her school bus crashed. Her parents, Tony and Bobbie, take her off life support and donate B.J.'s heart to her cousin, Maxie, whose heart is failing. The story won much critical acclaim and is regarded as a groundbreaker and one of the best stories to date. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-PabjzhVGM It can be viewed here.]] (It has been ripped off by several other {{Soap Opera}}s -- ''Series/AllMyChildren'', ''Series/DaysOfOurLives'', ''Series/GuidingLight'', and even ''General Hospital'' [[RecycledScript itself]] -- ten years after the B.J.'s heart storyline, a premature baby's bone marrow is donated to save the life of another infant who is revealed to be her half-sister.)
87* ''Series/GreysAnatomy'', many times. The most noteworthy is Denny Dukett, who falls in love with Izzy and is about to get a donor heart when the donor dies, meaning that there's only one heart left at that hospital, and it's going to go to another person. Izzy [[spoiler:cuts his LVAD wire, purposefully worsening his health to bump him up the list]]. He survives and gets the transplant, but [[spoiler:later dies of a stroke]].
88* ''Series/{{Haven}}'' features someone whose [[DifferentlyPoweredIndividual Trouble]] causes his organs to fail, and thus he needs transplants. He then can steal the organs of his children using an OverlyLongTongue, which also triggers their Trouble if they manage to live. [[spoiler:Duke ends up killing him to end the Trouble permanently.]]
89* ''Series/{{House}}'', oh so many times:
90** There's an episode in which a father kills himself to give one of his organs to his son.
91** In one episode, a patient has to find a kidney on the black market.
92** Another episode has a brain-dead donor who'd be perfect for a man with an ailing heart -- they just have to figure out what's wrong with her so that the donor board will sign off on it.
93** Another episode has a very unusual PatientOfTheWeek: a donated pair of lungs in a box that are supposed to be implanted but can't be because they have some kind of illness, so House is called in to cure them.
94* ''Series/LawAndOrder'':
95** "Sonata for a Solo Organ" features a millionaire philanthropist who is so desperate to acquire a kidney for his dying daughter (with the added complication that, due to a rare condition, she will reject any organs provided from any donor who is not a specific match to her blood type) that he bribes a doctor to kidnap some guy, steal his kidney then dump him in a park. This episode may have contributed to the persistence of the "[[OrganTheft kidney theft]]" urban legend.
96** In "[[Recap/LawAndOrderS5E15Seed Seed]]", the attorneys are thwarted in their effort to prosecute a fertility doctor who used his own sperm for his IVF patients when their best witnesses refuse to testify. The couple did not want it to become public that they had their second child (via IVF by the doctor) to provide bone marrow for a transplant for their first child, who had leukemia. The marrows did not match, and the first child died.
97** "[[Recap/LawAndOrderS8E4Harvest Harvest]]" has a woman being shot in the head during a robbery and declared brain-dead. Her grieving husband agrees to donate her organs, only for it to turn out that she isn't dead yet, and that the transplant doctor has accelerated the process in order to improve his record.
98* In the ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'' episode "Ex Stasis", the villain is giving away his organs to people he feels deserve it and killing them (in such a way that the organ can be transplanted into someone else) if they don't live up to the "bargain". In the end, [[spoiler:they get him to confess in exchange for allowing him to continue donating his organs while in prison]].
99* ''Series/LawAndOrderSVU'':
100** One episode centers around a [[BackAlleyDoctor black-market organ ring]], with one of the would-be patients being a young boy. Stabler is forced to shut it down, but he and the others are clearly sympathetic.
101** In a much later episode, a doctor harvests the organs of a brain-dead child without her parents' consent, and Olivia is forced to stop a helicopter from transporting the girl's heart, even though a child is likely to die without it. She does, but it's clear that she's extremely troubled by this decision (and Fin actually suggests they could "[get there] too late" to stop the helicopter). Both Benson and the little girl's father later express regret that they didn't just let the heart go to the other child.
102* In ''Series/{{Leverage}}'', "[[Recap/LeverageS04E09TheCrossMyHeartJob The Cross My Heart Job]]" features a rich businessman who attempted to steal a heart that was intended to be transplanted for a teenage boy. Unfortunately for him and fortunately for the boy, [[BerserkButton Nate and his team find out about this]] and are able to recover the heart. It is interesting due to the limited amount of time that the team has to work with.
103* ''Series/{{Lost}}'': Anthony Cooper shows the true depth of his [[TheSociopath sociopathy]] when he pretends to reconcile with his son in order to convince him to donate his kidney, then [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness abandon him after the operation]].
104* ''Series/MartialLaw'' has an episode in which a heart intended for a governor's daughter is stolen before it can be delivered.
105* The ''Series/{{MASH}}'' episode "[[Recap/MashS8E11LifeTime Life Time]]" deals with a soldier who needs an aorta for his heart and will either die or wind up paralyzed if not treated within a certain amount of time. There's one possibility for getting a suitable replacement, but it involves BJ waiting around for a fatally wounded soldier to die, which the soldier's buddy does ''not'' appreciate.
106* This happens quite a lot in ''Series/MondayMornings'' with interesting twists. Dr. Tierney's transplant program is in the center of attention as much as the brilliant neurosurgeries, which appear to be the show's main hook, apart from the M&M meetings (M&M stands for morbidity and mortality).
107** When a young gangster dies, his organs are harvested and transplanted to various people. The drama lies in Dr Tierney's insensitivity. He spoke about it in front of the dead kid's mother without knowing who she was. When he tried to apologize, he unfortunately insulted her and hurt her more by implying that her son's life was worthy only because he enabled several people to live.
108** One episode had a scheduled operation for kidney transplantation. A young women agreed to give up her kidney for her sister's benefit. [[spoiler:The sister who was to receive it dies during the operation. Naturally, they assume someone else could get it, but the woman wants it back, and um, she wants to eat it. She's sane, it's just that her grieving rituals are not western.]]
109** A young man is badly hurt, and everybody assumes that he was a [[DrivenToSuicide jumper]]. They are reluctant to treat him, but they do. He might end up a donor, but they actually need organs for him. [[spoiler:The team's attitude changes when they find out that he ''didn't'' try to commit suicide, but somebody pushed him. Dr. Hooten calls them out for it during their "screw-ups meetings" and is extremely harsh on them because suicidal people are considered ill, and they are ''not'' losers unwilling to live.]]
110** One woman who is brain-dead has already signed up to be a donor, but her son doesn't want her organs to be used. They want to legally stop the transplantations and argue that she didn't know what she gave consent to.
111* One episode of ''Series/NCISNewOrleans'' involves a ChildProdigy who needs a heart transplant. In this case, the problem isn't finding a viable heart for him; the problem is recovering it when it's stolen.
112* One episode of ''Series/{{NUMB3RS}}'' involves a group of Indian girls brought to the U.S. to sell their kidneys to a black-market organ ring. Two girls and one recipient end up dead, and a third girl just barely dodges being killed as well.
113* ''Series/NYPDBlue'': Bobby Simone needs a heart but is far down the list, so they ask all the cops in NYC going out on patrol that day to make sure that they sign up for organ donation and stipulate it goes to a cop, just in case. The one who ends up dying didn't sign up, and they have to convince his widow to allow them to take his heart. Bobby dies anyway.
114* In ''Series/OneTreeHill'', Dan spends several seasons searching for a heart transplant. The day of his surgery, a clumsy orderly trips and drops the heart -- which is then eaten by a nearby dog in one of the most infamous television scenes in recent memory.
115* ''Series/{{Oz}}'': Neo-Nazi inmate Robson makes the mistake of racially insulting the dentist giving him a gum transplant, resulting in him [[ColorMeBlack being implanted with gums from a black man]]. At first, this is PlayedForLaughs given that Robson is an AssholeVictim, but it quickly becomes NightmareFuel once he's thrown out of the Aryan Brotherhood.
116* One of many Court Cases of the Week in ''Series/PicketFences'' concerns an elderly man with Alzheimer's who wants the legal right to commit suicide under controlled conditions in the hospital so that his dying son can receive his heart. A ''very'' moving episode, in that the plaintiff is coherent at certain times of day ([[TruthInTelevision the "sundowning" phenomenon]]) and plainly incompetent at others. [[spoiler:The son eventually gets the heart of a homeless man who'd frozen to death instead... only to wind up shooting his dad to spare his dignity after finding him stark naked astride a child's rocking horse. Cue the ''next'' Court Case of the Week.]]
117* ''Series/ThePretender'': In the episode "[[Recap/ThePretenderS3E15Countdown Countdown]]", a schoolboy is in a car crash; one of his kidneys fails immediately, and the other is expected to go within a couple of days. Finding a match is complicated by him have a rare hereditary blood condition that the donor must also have -- and it turns out that ''neither'' of his parents has it. His mother confesses that she had a fling with another man shortly before she married, and the race is on to find that man and persuade him to save the son he doesn't know he has.
118* The SerialKiller of the week in the ''Series/{{Profiler}}'' episode "Dying to Live" murders people with a rare blood type in order to help people with that blood type in need of organs.
119* In ''Series/{{Psych}}'', someone kills a number of people on the regional liver transplant list, in an apparent attempt to move their own name to the top. It's a case of ArtisticLicenseMedicine, as the woman in need of the transplant [[spoiler:has an identical twin, who should've been able to voluntarily donate a liver lobe to her sister without recourse to the donor list]].
120* In ''renegadepress.com'''s "The Third Wheel", Jack tries to accept that he’s not a match for his mother’s bone marrow transplant.
121* In the ''Series/{{Scrubs}}'' episode "[[Recap/ScrubsS5E20MyLunch My Lunch]]", a recurring character commits suicide and three other patients receive organs from her. However, [[spoiler:it turns out that she didn't die of a drug overdose, but rather of rabies, and now the other patients have it too. All three die, and while two of them would never have survived long enough to find another donor anyway, one could easily have held on long enough if they hadn't been infected]]. TruthInTelevision: This episode was based on [[http://www.cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/07/01/rabies.organ.transplant/index.html a real case]].
122* ''Series/{{Sisters}}'': Big Al, second husband of oldest sister Alex, is in need of a donor heart and gets one on the day of second-oldest sister Teddy's wedding.
123* In ''Series/{{Soap}}'', Danny gets shot through both of his kidneys protecting his girlfriend/police witness. Mary, his mother, can't give him one so his brother, Jodie, offers his up except Mary is forced to reveal that they aren't full brothers and that Danny's real father is actually [[spoiler:Chester]], who Mary convinces to give up a kidney.
124* ''Series/TouchedByAnAngel'': One episode focuses on a young girl who needs a new heart, while her friend tries to convince a man to donate his brain-dead wife's. Unusually for both this trope and this show, the girl ''dies''. On the plus side, the grieving husband finally accepts his wife's death, allowing her organs to be used to save others.
125* ''Series/WalkerTexasRanger'': In Season 9's "[[Recap/WalkerTexasRangerS9E10Faith Faith]]", a liver intended for a young girl, the titular character, is accidentally stolen when bank robbers hijack the ambulance carrying it; they need the medics to tend to one of their own and have no knowledge of or interest in the organ. Regardless of the circumstances, the Rangers are left with very little time to catch the robbers, rescue the kidnapped EMT and recover the liver.
126* In the ''Series/WithoutATrace'' episode "Revelations", the VictimOfTheWeek is a priest in need of a liver transplant. His colleagues and the agents fear he may have met with foul play when they notice that he hasn't taken the pager that will alert him if one becomes available. And since one has, there is an urgent need to find him both before he dies or it goes to someone else. [[spoiler:It turns out that he disappeared on his own to make amends to someone he hurt before becoming a priest and has decided to accept his impending death.]]
127* "[[Recap/TheXFilesS07E06TheGoldbergVariation The Goldberg Variation]]" from ''Series/TheXFiles'' has a boy whose liver doesn't work well (Scully diagnoses him just by looking at him), and he needs either a transplant or to get in a special treatment program in England. He's got [[ABNegative a rare blood type]] and further complications. [[spoiler:He makes it through. A perfect match is found in a Mafioso who is killed near the end of the episode (this ContrivedCoincidence is {{justified|Trope}} as the MysteryOfTheWeek involves a man who is BornLucky).]]
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Video Games]]
131* In ''VideoGame/Hitman2016'', [[spoiler:[[TheIlluminati Providence]] convinced Director Erich Soders to betray the ICA in return for a heart transplant, as Soders has situs inversus (all of his organs are inverted when compared to a regular person), he requires an extremely rare [[BizarreHumanBiology "inverted" heart]] that only Providence can procure (with a shotgun and a beer cooler)]].
132* ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire'' has a sidequest involving a young girl whose liver is dying, and her father has come up with a way to replace an organ, but he needs a new or preserved liver. Your options are to convince him to use his own liver or to convince a ghost to atone for his sins by giving you his preserved liver.
133* ''Videogame/{{Rimworld}}:'' Since the game smooths over incompatibilities, getting one of your colonists a new organ to replace a failing one (damaged hearts, cirrhosis-melted livers, chemically damaged kidneys, cancer and bullet-afflicted organs) is as simple as ripping it out of another colonist. Or, better yet, one of the many Raiders that will try to kill your colony. Indeed, you can replace your favorite pawn's clogged heart with that of some random space pirate that's barely alive after stepping on a landmine... and [[OrganTheft sell the other organs to the next trader]].
134* The SEGA ''VideoGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' game has a sidequest in which you must steal a prototype cyber-heart for a mercenary whose body has been fitted with so much [[CyberneticsEatYourSoul cyberware]] that his regular heart is too weak to continue sustaining him.
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138* ''WebAnimation/HappyTreeFriends'': In the episode "A Change of Heart", Lumpy searches for a new heart for Disco Bear after his gets clogged and deflated. He initially steals one from a dead Handy, only for it to get destroyed. He eventually has no choice but to steal a ''whale's heart'' and [[BodyHorror force it into Disco Bear's body]].
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142* In the 2022 episode "Kidney" in ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'' Old Beavis sits on the couch for several days straight and doesn't go to the bathroom, just so he doesn't have to sit on the side of the couch with a spring sticking out. As a result, both of his kidneys explode like water balloons, and he desperately needs a kidney transplant. The only eligible donor is Old Stewart, and even though the operation is a success, Old Beavis can't take having a "wuss" kidney and drinks until the donated kidney pops.
143* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/ChillyBeach'' has Dale's estranged brother show up out of the blue and mention that he needs a kidney. Dale is quite reluctant to go through with it, however, a guy gives him a shout-down for letting his brother die. As it turns out, Dale's incompatible with his brother. [[spoiler:[[PlayedForLaughs Frank, on the other hand...]]]]
144* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'', John Force (the head of the National Hot Rod Association) needs a kidney transplant and Dale is a compatible donor. Then it turns out that John was completely fine but Hank (who is holding Dale's Power of Attorney) is told by the doctors that there is a little boy who ''can'' use the kidney, but Hank hesitates. When asked who would even think of hesitating to save a little boy's life, Hank replies "Dale would". Fortunately, Dale ends up giving the little boy his kidney anyway.
145* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' has Grandpa's kidneys burst, and he eventually wheedles one out of Homer. It's mentioned that "You've dramatically shortened your lifespan so someone else can enjoy a few more short years of life." The episode ends with Homer patting one of Bart's kidneys...
146* In ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'', Kyle becomes seriously ill when one of his kidneys fails. His mission to get hold of one is hampered by a sudden craze for [[SnakeOilSalesman alternative medicine]], leaving all the adults in the town dismissive of his ailment. Worse, the only potential donor with a compatible blood type is Cartman, who [[ComedicSociopathy takes great pleasure in the idea of watching him die]].
147* ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers'': Dr. Venture finds himself in need of two kidneys after he wakes up in a tubful of ice and a [[OrganTheft kidney-shaped set of stitches]] in his back. He ends up taking [[spoiler:one from each of his sons, who have been [[BodyBackupDrive cloned multiple times because each keeps dying in some stupid fashion]]]].
148* ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'': In the Season One episode [[Recap/YoungJusticeS1E20Coldhearted "Coldhearted"]], the young Queen Perdita of [[{{Ruritania}} Vlatava]] desperately needed a heart transplant. The problem is that the only viable donator heart is in Boston while she is on the other side of the country in Seattle. To make matters worse, her evil uncle Count Vertigo, with the help of the Light, attempts to indirectly kill her by unleashing four flying ice fortresses that cover the entire North American Continent in a huge blizzard, thus preventing the hospitals from being able to transport the donator heart by air. Kid Flash has to use his SuperSpeed to transport the heart 3000 miles (4800km) across the country [[RaceAgainstTheClock before the heart is no longer viable in four hours]]. He manages to successfully transport the heart and save Perdita's life while also exposing Count Vertigo's attempted murder scheme, allowing Perdita to revoke his [[DiplomaticImpunity Diplomatic Immunity]] and place him under arrest.
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152* When [[UsefulNotes/NotablePlayersOfTheNBA NBA player]] Alonzo Mourning needed a new kidney, he got countless offers from his fans to get a new kidney; Mourning told them to register their names with the Red Cross instead and is currently lobbying for legislation to make it easier for others to get new kidneys.[[note]]Unlike most transplants, kidney transplants can (and usually do) use living donors. While humans are normally born with two kidneys, they can function fully normally with only one (as evidenced by otherwise normal people who were born with only one).[[/note]]
153* One of those sidebar stories in ''Reader's Digest'' tells the tale of a woman who received a heart transplant and (unknowingly) struck up a romance with the grieving widower, wondering why he'd always caress her chest where her heart lay.
154* Controversy surrounded baseball great Mickey Mantle in 1995 when he received a liver transplant. The objections were: 1.) Alcoholism and hard living had destroyed his first liver, but 2.) he received the transplant after a short wait, jumping ahead of others who had been waiting much longer, and 3.) he died soon afterward anyway.
155* When a young Canadian woman named Helene Campbell found out that she had idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and would die without a double lung transplant, she started a social media campaign to document her condition and encourage people to register as organ donors. She eventually received a new set of lungs. Her work as an advocate continues today.
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