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Body Donors: A Final Gift of Teaching

Jan Stribula, of Ridgefield, Conn., has agreed to donate his body to the New York City hospital where he was born. His wife Mary is also considering donating her body.
Andrea Hsu, NPR
Jan Stribula, of Ridgefield, Conn., has agreed to donate his body to the New York City hospital where he was born. His wife Mary is also considering donating her body.

It's one of the most personal choices someone can make — deciding to give one's body to medical science. As part of a series on the end of life and the gift of teaching, NPR's Melissa Block talks to people who have have offered to become body donors.

Rhonda Disbrow, 40, a hair stylist who lives near Baltimore, recently mailed in a one-page form authorizing the Anatomy Board of Maryland to use her body for medical education and research.

Some conservative friends and acquaintances questioned Disbrow's decision on religious grounds. "My answer to that is I believe in God, I consider myself a Christian... Thinking that the contribution could help modern medicine and modern research makes me feel really good. Once my spirit is out of this vessel, if it can help, they can use it."

And the uses are many. The Maryland anatomy board receives about 1,500 donor bodies a year. About 300 will end up at medical schools for anatomical dissection. The rest will be used for medical training for paramedics or doctors — gynecologists might practice laparoscopic hysterectomies or orthopedists might work on hip or knee replacements. Or researchers may study the brain of an Alzheimer's patient.

There have been scandals. UCLA suspended its willed body program last year, after the director of the program was arrested on suspicion of trafficking in body parts. Tulane University was sued after it transferred bodies to a middleman who then sold them to the Army for land mine experiments.

Ronn Wade, who overseas the Maryland body donation program, says the majority of those who donate their bodies are women. Most have families and at least a high school education. Many don't have a strong family tradition of a classic funeral — and are happy to save that expense.

Above all, Wade says, the donors want to promote learning. "This is the legacy they can leave behind for the next generation," he says.

Jan Stribula, 56, of Ridgefield, Conn., has decided to donate his body to the New York City hospital where he was born. For him it's like "completing the circle, somehow, going back to the same place," the civil engineer says.

His wife Mary, 58, is also considering donating her body. The hospital social worker became more interested in becoming a donor after seeing her mother suffer from dementia, and learning about the ways in which post-mortem studies of the brain might lead to medical advances. "It really made me understand that there really are things that our body can do after we've died that could be very helpful to people," she says.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

As special correspondent and guest host of NPR's news programs, Melissa Block brings her signature combination of warmth and incisive reporting. Her work over the decades has earned her journalism's highest honors, and has made her one of NPR's most familiar and beloved voices.
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