This latest operation in maryland has been getting a lot of attention, and it's been held as a break through. I think trying to rescue someone, remember, it was done as an emergency intervention on a person who had no other options. There is an animal welfare issue here that's serious. My own position about that animal welfare issue is we've got to think over all, that we are treating the animals well. They don't suffer. This is not factory farming for bacon.
Earlier this month, in a medical first, surgeons from the University of Maryland transplanted a genetically altered pig heart into a living person. Doctors believed it was their only chance to save the life of David Bennett, a 57-year-old patient who was considered too ill for a human organ replacement. With hundreds of thousands of people worldwide in need of new organs, are animals set to be the future of transplantation? Ian Sample talks to bioethicist Prof Arthur Caplan about how the operation was made possible, and what could be next. Help support our independent journalism at
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