The hospital does not find the donors, since it would be a conflict since the have an Ethics committee tointerview the donor. The Transplant Surgeons are NOT hospital employees as they are in the US . Since the Transplant team needs to approve the donor medically , it is someone with the team who knows of the donorand not myself. The logic is that I can not buy anything in this country at a lower price than the Filipinos can. So, what I do is to find the ESRD patients who prefer a transplant. I also keeps the Surgeons from changing prices by playing off one from the next Surgeon. I throw around the names of their competitors to let them know i can do this. They are very experienced Surgeons as well as experienced at prying extra money from the foreigner. Since I give people a fixed price, I can't allow the Surgeon to demand what ever he likes, so I switch whenneeded. The donor gets free followup forever ,whenever.
He was given this chance on D&T (Dialysis & Transplant City) now he will have his chance here.
The donors are young men in their twenty's for the mostpart. The hospital does not find the donors, since it would be a conflict since the have an Ethics committee tointerview the donor.
BTW Sara with all those poor Philippine relativesof your husband, why aren't you saving them ?
I personally am not sure that our system in the USA is perfect but I do believe that the people who developed it did the best they could. Geoff
If you were extremely poor and unemployed in the US, would you consider it reasonable to donate a kidney for that much money?
There is a tendency to exaggerate the medical risks of having only one kidney. In fact, many people are born with only one kidney and never know it, and it is only first discovered at autopsy. In every sense the second kidney is really a surplus organ to protect the body against those rare accidents in which one kidney could be hurt by trauma, but in the modern world where we are no longer cavemen fighting sabre toothed tigers, this protection is no longer necessary.
I will ask again... If you believe that this will solve your health issues and truly be a help to all the other parties involved then are you going to take action yourself and pay to receive a transplant?? I would like to see "in action" all these benefits you are taking about put into motion. Let's use you as a trial case and document every aspect of the social, economic and health benefits this can offer. Then we can put it out to all the people (the donors, doctors and patients) and see what everyone really thinks. I say put up or shut up!