This has nothing to do with "Obamacare" - this has everything to do with the organ allocation system. Sebelius could have waived the rule - she chose not to interfere and allow the people with a more in-depth knowledge of this situation make their judgment. She knows that there are medical professionals and others staffing committees at UNOS/OPTN with a much greater understanding of the entire situation and she chose to trust them - one might have thought that would have given Judge Baylson pause, but it did not. His action set precedence, and probably not a good one for us. Now, when someone is not satisfied with a particular listing situation and they have power, through wealth, influence, or media spouting accurate or false information - they will lawyer-up and muddy the waters. This will not be a good outcome in the longer term future. And it should be remembered - this is not simply about saving the life of a 10-year-old girl - this is about choosing who lives and who dies... The lungs that may be directed to Sarah will be at the expense of the person to whom they were destined. That person very well may not get another chance... Adult lungs given to Sarah will not fit, and will have to be transplanted partially. Taking lobes off lungs for transplant complicates the surgery markedly and reduces Sarah's chances of survival, and longer term survival. The allocation algorithms look not only at level of illness, but at likelihood of survival. Giving adult lungs to a child with a riskier surgery and statistically lower survival rate, versus giving them to an adult with a markedly survival rate and lower risk surgery, might seem to be an inappropriate use of a rare resource. The decision here needs to be whether to save a child, or whether to save an adult - and that adult may be a father, a mother, a sole wage earner in a family - with the knowledge that the better match is the adult - that is the decision that also must be considered. Love, Steve