Sure, the question is not if, but how much. If nothing else, there is guarantee issue
An organ transplant can cause tissue rejection, where the patient's immune system tries to destroy the transplanted organ, because the foreign organ is mistaken for pathogens.
Heart, kidneys, lungs, liver, pancreas, corneas, and small intestine are all commonly transplanted. Almost everything can be transplanted, it's whether the transplant is "successful" that's the problem. Brains are never successfully transplanted. Faces are only just successful. Limbs can be but usually are not, since they are not essential for life. It is whether the organ is essential for life that dictates whether it is commonly transplanted or not.
A life insurance agent is the person who knows about the various life insurance policies and explains them to potential clients. The agent is the person who sells you life insurance.
I guess the brain, since it is the one organ that can't be transplanted or subverted and still live a fully functioning life.
A person can get life insurance NO matter where that person is ... it is up to the insurer to issue the insurance on the person more then likely the insurance company will not insure said person ...
Life insurance is not a scam. There are benefits and drawbacks to having life insurance, it simple depends on the person's needs.
Banner Life Insurance offer life insurance services. They offer Term Life Insurance which covers a person for a specific time and Universal Life Insurance which covers one for life.
The insurance company.
Hearts, liver, kidneys, lungs, small intestine, pancreas, corneas, heart valves. Some other things have been transplanted (both successfully and unsuccessfully), but typically only "life saving" organs are routinely transplanted.
you can't. The person needs to be out and off probation to be able to get life insurance.
Just to clarify your question, if the organ cannot be transplanted there is no "recipient", since nobody receives the organ. The brain is not transplantable in humans. It has been performed in labs on animals, with mixed outcomes. However in humans it is unclear whether there are any medical conditions which would actually benefit from a 'brain transplant', let alone other ethical questions of performing such a procedure. The large intestine is not commonly transplanted because it is not necessary to sustain life (however it is medically possible). Likewise, the stomach, gall-bladder and appendix are not necessary for survival.
No. You have to have an insurable interest in the person's life in order to take out an insurance policy on their life.