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!
Sandmansa You have taught me something I wasn't sure about. Your type of ethics, not logic is what keeps alot of people from seeking out a live un related donor transplant. Based on some of your statements , your version of ethics may be flawed. This is what traps you, sticking with the waiting list cadaver system. I never had ESRD ,nor has many of the doctors treating you guys, yet forming reasonable opinions is still possible.
Therefore your question- "Would you willingly accept one from some shady, black marketeer?" sounds like a story from the National Inquirer. They do NOT exist. Therefore your ethics seem to be based on a make believe myth. If your ethics is based on non existant black marketeers, then it's time to look specifically at the Philippines.
If all countries introduced the 'presumed consent' laws which exist in Austria, Belgium, and Spain, according to which every cadaver is presumed to be available for organ harvesting unless the person has signed, during his lifetime, a special form denying this permission, the organ shortage could be solved over night. But this reasonable proposal is considered in many countries to be too much of an imposition of state power on the freedom of the individual, so it is not adopted.
But then how can these same governments turn around and say that they can impose state power on dialysis patients to keep them from buying their way out of the medical trap they find themselves in? Is the right to have your corpse buried intact higher than the right to live by getting a transplant? Why don't governments institute a policy where everyone has to sign up at age 18 to donate their organs if they die; then if they don't, they will never be eligible for a transplant. Why should a person be able to benefit from a donated organ that he was not willing to donate himself?
The system proposed by Rupert Jarvis for organ transplants to be available only to those who signed up ahead of their renal failure to indicate their willingness to be donors starts with people 18 years of age just for the simple reason that that is the earliest age at which legal consent can be given. Obviously special cases, such as people incompetent to consent, people developing renal failure before age 18, people who just moved to the country before renal failure, etc., would have to be taken care of by special legislation within the overall plan. But the idea is a fair one, that if you expect to benefit by a cadaver organ you should be prepared to donate one, and would end overnight the organ shortage problem, since probably everyone would sign onto the plan. But it would still preserve autonomy, since people who had profound objections to organ donation could simply stay out of the plan if they wanted.
Mitch and I are not the same person, as anyone can easily tell from the difference in our writing styles! Also, my personal knowledge of the dialysis and transplant experience should be sufficient indication that I am not Mitch, who does not claim to have had any such experience himself. I was registered with this message board long before Mitch appeared, and I am sure that with such a technologically advanced website as Epoman has constructed, he can tell that Mitch and I are never using the same server, and that we are in fact posting occasionally at nearly the same time from commerical networks which cover areas of the globe many thousands of miles distant from each other. Since I speak frankly about my personal experiences on this message board, I claim the same right to anonymity, however, as everyone else here does.
Oh, and forgive me for comparing you to that of a black marketeer. It's just the way you are presenting your arguments, make you seem like you are selling something to good to be true. And ummm, I don't know where you get your information about black markets but they do exist. Just because you have not seen that kind of activity, does not mean it doesn't happen. Can you show me proof that black markets are a myth?
Angie if you are really poor can you prove it ? How about a due diligence or disability letter.?
Proving I am not a black marketeer . Will you take my word for it ? Mr.Sandman ,Have you ever seen a picture of a black marketeer ? If they exist, where are the pics. ? The absence of hard proof by Nancy Scheper of Organ Watch and the horrified British lady. The people who believe those fairy tales are indeed closing their mind toa major transplant option and indeed throwing away the key to their invisible cell.
you are trying to sell icecudes to Eskimos who get icecubes for FREE. You had better be prepared to do a better job. We can all get kidneys eventually just fine in our own countries.
The debate of presumed consent comes up.
To Sandman I would say that I never said that getting a transplant was a cure for renal disease, but it is a million times better than dialysis, as I know from my own experience. Something does not have to be perfect to be worth preferring over the alternative. During the time you are on dialysis, you make successive accommodations to your declining energy levels, your increasing discomforts, and your progressive loss of mental focus. These accommodations are so continuous and subtle that over time you don't notice how far you have dropped below normal functioning. But from my own experience, as soon as I was back in my hospital bed after being wheeled out of the recovery room following the transplant, I felt enormously more energetic, clear-headed, and inwardly well than I ever had on dialysis, even though, at that moment, I had just been through a four-hour operation. I was shocked and profoundly disturbed to realize, for the first time in years, just how sick I had become on dialysis without noticing its full dimension. I am sure other transplant patients here can confirm what I say from their own experience.