This post is from GRS staff writer Donna Freedman. Donna writes a personal finance column for MSN Money, and writes about frugality and intentional living at Surviving And Thriving.
A basic burial averages close to $6,600 in the United States. Many people worry about the financial burden this places on their families. There is a way around this besides opting to be cremated and carrying enough life insurance: whole-body donation.
It’s estimated that at least 20,000 bodies are donated each year. I’m considering it myself. The idea of contributing to medical education and research intrigues me — and I also like the idea that it potentially means a no-cost funeral.
That sounds like the lowest form of cheapskatery, but hear me out. I’d planned on cremation, since my personal desire is not to take up any real estate after death. I’d rather leave this mortal coil to the folks who are still alive to enjoy it. But even a bargain-rate cremation runs about $750, and if surviving family wanted a chance to say goodbye first it would cost more. Maybe a lot more.
My estate is fairly small, and I’d like to leave as much of it as possible to my only child, who experiences some disability. And again: I’d like to help future doctors, nurses, and other medical professionals improve their skill sets.
Your religious faith may have strict rules about how a corpse should be treated. Or maybe you just can’t get past the idea that you will be dissected over a period of months in anatomy class, or cut up and divided among different programs (brain to an Alzheimer’s study, joints to an orthopedic surgery training).
If that bothers you, then of course you shouldn’t do it. Keep in mind there won’t be much bodily integrity in that 6-by-3 slot in the soil, either. Your body will decompose. Ashes to ashes and all that.
A caring and gracious act
If I were a wagering woman, I’d bet that 90% of the readers who saw the headline either shuddered or said “eeewww.” Maybe both.
Riddle me this: Why is organ donation lauded while donating a body gives us the heebie-jeebies? They’re both caring, gracious acts. But you probably won’t see a Lifetime movie about the impact of whole-body donation because people generally find the idea deeply creepy. It puts the “gross” in “gross anatomy.”
Here’s another way of thinking about it: Whole-body donation benefits all of us, every day. Any physician trained in the United States worked with cadavers. New medical instruments and new surgical methods are perfected on human tissues, joints, and bones.
Altruism is the usual motive for donation, according to industry spokespeople. (Yep, it’s an industry. More on that in a minute.) People designate their bodies for study to contribute to the greater good.
Not every medical school has a “willed body” program, however. The ones that don’t need to get cadavers from somewhere else. Sometimes that means another medical school, but it usually involves one of the handful of nonprofit and for-profit companies that procure human tissue in this country.
How do those companies obtain bodies? By paying for transport and final disposition, that’s how. Hence the idea of a free funeral.
How much is that body in the window?
Not every medical school pays for preliminary embalming and transportation of cadavers. Posthumous enrollment in gross anatomy class means getting your own ride to school. By contrast, the human-tissue procurement companies pay for all of it, from pickup to cremation.
Here’s how to find out more about both options:
- The University of Florida has compiled a list of body donation programs in the United States.
- For nonprofit and for-profit companies, search online for “whole body donation.”
Maybe the idea of the body as commodity strikes you as just wrong. You’re not alone. Medical ethicists are still trying to figure out the ramifications of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, which forbids the sale of human tissue for transplant or therapy. It does permit “reasonable payment” for services such as surgical removal, storage, transportation, etc. But it doesn’t address whole bodies or the sale of body parts for anything other than transplant or therapy.
So are you breaking the law by arranging for the postmortem sale of your body? No one is quite sure. I look at it this way: If I make this choice I won’t be profiting by it. I’ll be saving my daughter and any other heirs the cost of dealing with my remains.
If you opt for a nonprofit or for-profit group, be aware that each does things differently. For example, some allow for organ donation because they deal in body parts as well as whole cadavers.
You may have the chance to have your ashes mailed back to your heirs. At least one company sends a letter about the kind of research that was furthered by your body (or parts of it).
Certain conditions preclude donation, e.g., contagious diseases such as hepatitis and AIDS. Some programs will not accept extremely obese cadavers.
Timing might make a difference, too, since some organizations specify “no embalming” — in other words, the cadaver must be refrigerated and shipped as soon as one hour after death. If seeing you one last time is important to family members, choose a company that allows enough time for viewings.
It’s important to note that you may not be able to dictate how your body will be used, such as in the following circumstances:
- A whole-body donation company may sell to private-sector researchers or companies that design new medical devices.
- A company may use body parts in on-site physician training facilities.
- Some send cadavers to medical schools in countries where whole-body donation goes against cultural mores.
If these examples trouble you, then you might want to donate only to a medical school. This will likely cost money, although probably still less than a funeral.
Plan your approach
Should you decide to donate, research the options and make the arrangements yourself. A nebulous “please donate my body to science” request isn’t fair to your loved ones. When you die they’ll be shocked and grieving; don’t make them look up the different programs and try to figure out what you would have wanted.
Talk to your family about it now, and don’t be surprised if you encounter objections. Listen to them. It will be easier to answer such concerns if you’ve read the FAQ sections of med school or donation company websites. Remember: Their feelings are valid, even though ultimately it is your decision.
Unless, of course, your next of kin ignores your request and arranges a funeral. If you think this could happen, put your final wishes in writing and get them witnessed and notarized. Store the document with other “in the event of my death” paperwork, and maybe leave copies with a family member you trust to carry out your decision.
Incidentally, this can go the other way: Your next of kin can donate your body to science without your consent. If that skeeves you out, make your wishes known quite emphatically. Myself, I’d put it in writing. I’d also threaten to come back and haunt whoever did the donating.
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I haven’t read all the comments so this may have been mentioned: If returning to the earth matters to you, burial in a public cemetery is probably your worst option. By law, coffins are placed in a concrete vault when they go into the ground, so you’ll never end up back in the earth. You’ll be in your concrete box forever.
If you want to return to the earth, I think the best option is cremation and burial of ashes, or burial at sea.
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Although I am still considering the body donation, I would never be an organ donor.
I consider hospitals to be among the most greedy entities in American. No way will I give them something of value so that they will have an opportunity to charge someone tens of thousands of dollars in order to facilitate the transfer of my organ.
If there was a hospital that would charge a very modest rate in the event of an organ transfer I would re-consider. The two in my home town sure would never qualify.
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For a moment, set aside how angry you are at hospitals. Imagine that you are the sibling, son or spouse of someone who needs an organ. Without the organ, this person you love deeply will die.
Now imagine you’re having a cup of coffee in the hospital cafeteria and you hear someone at the next table say, “I would NEVER be an organ donor because hospitals charge too much money.”
The decision to donate or not donate is of course your choice. But right now you’re choosing not to save (or at least extend) a life or lives because of personal pique about the health-care system.
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Erwin, please reconsider your stance. Had it not been for a lovely young woman who choose to donate her organs, I would not be here now. I would have missed my daughter graduating from high school, college, and starting her Masters. Yes, it was expensive but there is no price I wouldn’t have paid for the times I have had in these past 4 years.
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As a student who was lucky enough to take Human Anatomy Lab at a university where we got not 1, not 2, but 4 cadavers to view, the experience is invaluable. We did not do the dissections (the grad students did that), but we were able to see, on a real person, exactly where muscles were attached, how the arteries and veins fit together, how the organs looked in vivo. And to be able to see that every human body is different. Branching on veins and arteries varies, nerves differ, the muscles look different. We got to see a heart with a pacemaker attached, and one person had an extra muscle along the sternum (cats have it, humans typically don’t).
Everyone was always very respectful of the cadavers. We weren’t allowed to take pictures. Or rudely joke or demean the cadaver in any way. We’d get thrown out of the class with disciplinary actions if that occurred.
As a scientist, my hope is that, when I die, my body can in some way help someone, no matter how I died or how old I was. Whether it be through organ donation or as a teaching tool or as an experiment to determine decomposition in various elements, and not have to be buried or cremated. I’d rather someone get something out of my body rather than it sit in the ground.
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Thank you for this article. This is something I’ve been wanting to do and never knew how to go about it.
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I’ve wanted to donate my body to science since I was a kid, but my wife threw an absolute fit when we discussed it (while completing our wills).
So, unless I can convince her to change her mind, I’m simply donating my organs instead.
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Wow! This was an eye opening topic for me. I’m already registered as an organ donor, but I never knew (or thought of) that the whole body can be donated. This is something that I would really like to know more about, and I have a feeling, will eventually sign up with a program (there is one Medical school right in my city)!
Thanks Donna!
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Thank YOU for considering such a kind and caring gesture.
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How to spend a tax refund?
Don’t!
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I was solicited as a brain donor because I have one of those rare neurological disorders with no cause. I carry a card with me and have informed my family that when I die, my brain goes to a medical center so that it can be studied and help other people living with the same condition. Although, I really hope they figure out how to fix me before I croak!
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I am a first year medical student, and I spend about 15 hours a week dissecting cadavers. The knowledge gained is tremendous, and I am thankful for our lady’s contribution. It’s gruesome and disgusting, and in no way do these people have a semblance of dignity when splayed on chopped…for lack of better words, but what we gain we take out into the world and help people every day. When we are done, certain parts are kept as examples or put into displays…but there is no connection to the actual person. We don’t know names or any identifying information. It is a great gift that carries on long after death, and it’s oddly comforting during life knowing that future physicians will gain education.
I am done with the body, and I don’t hold much value in cemeteries. I understand a funeral service for remembrance and respect, but the body is not accomplishing much in the ground or incinerated. This is why I will donate my body.
For people interested, I would look into your local medical school. Most have a department that takes care of this, and you can request how your body is used. Some people just say, do whatever, some only sign up for student dissection. There are options.
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As someone who has a spouse in medical school, I can say that the need for people to donate their bodies to science is absolutely critical. Without them, doctors would be learning on plastic dummies. Not optimal when you think about it.
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I am a 49 year old mother of two beautiful daughters. I am also an alcoholic and heroine user in recovery. As a result of my using i have contracted Hep C as well as cirrosis. Thier father is a active alcoholic . My daughters do not have a problem with any substance thank god. I do not have any life insurance and do not want to give them any finacial heartship. I want to donate my body to science so it won’t cost them anything. i would like it to be somewhere where I could get cremated so my family could do what they wished with my ashes that gave them comfort. I can not even have this disscustion with my kids or my parents. I’d hate to broad side them but thats how things will have to be .
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