TnT, another source says: "Death and upgrades while the patients were
waiting tended to occur early in the queuing process, and prolonged
waiting was not associated with worse surgical outcomes."
http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/cont...4/suppl_1/I-92
Now what does that say to you? "Early in the queuing process" -- what
exactly does that mean to you, "early", I mean. Even the American
system has "early" in the queuing process. EVERY system has lines. Thus
every system has EARLY.
OK, so deaths occur EARLY. Thus, the death was NOT the result of being
in a pro-longed line-up. Death occurred EARLY.
NOW PLEASE NOTE THE CONCLUDING SENTENCE: "prolonged waiting was not
associated with worse surgical outcomes."
So, it looks like you are supprting KMAN, eh?
frtzw906