Before I developed renal failure, I was living a hyperactive life as a university professor at two separate universities, one in England and one in Germany. Suddenly, however, I was struck down by Wegener's Vasculitis, an extremely rare autoimmune disease which transformed me from a healthy, young-llooking man in his forties to a feeble renal paitient in the span of just two weeks. I spent eight years on dialysis, during which I was unable to work and endured a kind of living death, during which my existence was plagued with hypersomnia, constant nausea and vomiting, itching, difficulty concentrating, and exhaustion -- despite my rigid adherence to the renal diet and 15 hours of hemodialysis a week. Eventually I got a transplant, and the effect was immediate and remarkable, since I felt truly awake for the first time in years just minutes after coming out of the recovery room following the operation. In the year since then, I have been able to return to work and feel about 80% as healthy as I did before renal failure. The main limitations I experience are from clouding of the vision due to cataracts forming in response to the prednisone dose; tiredness from persistent low hemoglobin levels; and severe, month-long illness when I get the winter flu. Still, I feel incomparably more healthy than I did on dialysis, and now realize that I was unable to perceive during dialysis exactly how far I had dropped below the level of normal living.
It also seems to be assumed on this message board that living with just one kidney is some dire medical problem which requires constant, intensive, and expensive medical follow-up, when in fact the medical literature shows that this is not the case. Many people are born with only one kidney and this is never known until it is discovered at autopsy or by chance bla bla bla same old crap as stated earlier
Impoverished Indians who sell their kidneys in an effort to escape poverty suffer financially and medically in the long run, a new study has found (JAMA 2002;288:1589-93).
But the healthy majority of people, who don't care about sick people, who don't understand what their lives are like, and who don't even like them, decide to declare paid kidney donation illegal or unethical because of their thoughtless, knee-jerk reaction to the image of the 'organ trade' and of 'transplant tourism,' and their aesthetic dislike for the 'violation of the sacredness of the human body.' But dialysis is the real violation of the sacredness of the human body, not the voluntary removal of a duplicate organ to save someone else's life.
In Canada altruistic donation, perfectly legal in the U.S., is forbidden, because it is imagined that all altruistic donors must really be paid donors. Paired organ donation, which has saved many lives in the U.S., is also forbidden in Canada, because the Canadian Medical Association feels it needs another decade or so to study the question, all the while patients are dying around them left and right.
If half the population of the world had endstage renal failure and the other half was healthy, what would the laws on organ purchase be? Would the society be content to watch all its resources eaten up by the cost of dialysis, to have half its population suffering all the time, to lose productivity for the many people unemployed, to have the hospitals overcrowded with cases of dialysis-induced morbidity, and to watch the average life expectancy sink from premature deaths on dialysis? I doubt it. On the contrary, there would either be laws confiscating all the surplus kidneys in society from the healthy half of the population and transplanting them into the sick half, or there would be compulsory purchase of organs, or at the very least voluntary organ sales would be allowed. So if the majority would react this way if dialysis were a large-scale problem, what is their moral basis for making organ purchases illegal just because it is a relatively small-scale problem?
The healthy majority understands the vulnerable minority of dialysis patients as little as Southern racists in the first half of the 20th century understood the Blacks they oppressed, and yet we take the majority's word for it when we accept their ignorant ethical rules for governing our situation, which we all know they don't understand in the least. I think every renal patient owes it to himself to liberate himself from an ethical system made for us by people who don't understand the plight we are in, and to look with an open mind at the real ethics of organ transplant purchase.
If the donor backs out at the last minute and the transplant does not take place, of course the transplant candidate does not owe any money for the services he has not yet received. In the Philippinnes it is not difficult to find a replacement donor, so the only problem for the transplant candidate would be having to wait for the new donor's blood typing, HLA testing, cross-match, medical fitness exam, and ethical committee screening to be completed.
ALso I wanted to ask this: If there is no problem in the Filipinos giving kidneys away, why does it say in this article that they are dying at a high rate due to kidney disease. How can they give kidneys away to people who pay and not to their OWN people? Something seems fishy to me about that.
Very good post Sandman also on top of that there is the risk of infection (don't think it never happens!). See here!ALso I wanted to ask this: If there is no problem in the Filipinos giving kidneys away, why does it say in this article that they are dying at a high rate due to kidney disease. How can they give kidneys away to people who pay and not to their OWN people? Something seems fishy to me about that.
One poster here seems to like dialysis and does not believe my statement that dialysis patients are 'dying left and right,' but the fact is that dialysis vastly shortens life expectancy, and the death rate among dialysis patients in most first world countries is 9 to 13% a year, which is about the same as the death rate among the soldiers in the trenches on the Western Front during the First World War
http://www.pia.gov.ph/news.asp?fi=p050224.htm&no=6In the U.S., the average cost of transplant is $120,000 or more than P6 million. In the Philippines, one set of laparascopic transplants would only cost a patient P300,000."The Philippines has the cheapest kidney transplant cost. However, most Filipinos cannot afford such surgery because the money comes out of their own pockets," Filipino nephrologist Dr. Franklin Guillano said.Bretan said in the U.S., the government pays for the people's dialysis treatments and even kidney transplantation."No one in the U.S. can pay $65,000 for dialysis per year," he said as he explained how comprehensive medical care programs had become an important part in the lives of Americans.In the Davao region alone, a Philippine study on nephrology showed that out of 854 ESRD patients, only 122 underwent dialysis treatment."Two-thirds were not able to undergo such treatment, neither were they hospitalized for such disease. Most patients on dialysis also ran out of money in three to six months time which caused their death," Guillano bared.
http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/182_05_070305/ken10034_fm.htmlLack of donors has led to a worldwide increase in commercial kidney transplantation programs where recipients acquire kidneys either from executed prisoners or live non-related donors.Commercial transplantation is prohibited by legislation in Australia.Our centres have had 16 patients who have travelled overseas to receive a commercial kidney transplant; five have subsequently died.As has been found previously, patients who received commercial transplants were more likely to develop infections such as HIV, hepatitis B virus, cytomegalovirus and fungal infections.Previous reports have found that patient and graft survival were comparable to local results, whereas we found that patient and graft survival were worse than transplantation within Australia.Patients considering the option of overseas commercial donation should be advised that heightened risks to life and graft survival exist.
http://www.humantrafficking.org/updates/134Philippines ratified the United Nations Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children supplementing the United Nations Convention on Transnational Organized Crime on September 30, 2001. The definition of trafficking in persons in the Philippine's bill is very similar to that of the Protocol. The version of the bill on Anti-trafficking passed in the House of Representatives defines trafficking in persons as "the recruitment, transportation, transfer or harboring or receipt of persons with or without the victim's consent or knowledge through legal or illegal means within or across national borders by means of threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud, deception, abuse of power or of position, taking advantage of the vulnerability of the person, or, the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labor or services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal or the sale of organs.
If only all of the prisoners were like dialysis patients, there wouldn't be any need for guards, because the prisoners themselves would keep themselves locked in, thinking it was unethical to try to escape!