Mallory, don't you understand? Stauffenberg and Mitch are the same person. They've been getting off by making kidney patients feel bad on numerous other boards for years. Don't argue with him/them. Just accept that these guys are playing your emotions like a fiddle and ignore them. I don't know for the life of me why Epoman and Angie are allowing this nonsense to continue on their boards. It was the undoing of other boards and it will darn well wreck these boards if it is allowed to continue.
I recommend that any member who is tired of this thread or does not wish to read it or debate in it anymore, simply ignore it and don't even click the thread.
a 30 year old can expect to live 9.4 years. (Jeremy Levy, et al, "Oxford Handbook of Dialysis" (2001) page 5.) The serious damage which dialysis does to the musculature, the vasculature, the bone mass, and the nervous system will occur whether you watch your fluid intake or not.
the price of a Philippine transplant which was cited, $120,000, is way out of range and much higher than the actual price. One transplant facilitator I spoke with said he charges $200,000, and another facilitator in the Philippines, who got into the business because this was the only way he could get a transplant for his wife, who had been taken off the waiting list in the U.S., said he charges $95,000. Mitch is less expensive.
I know so much about Mitch because I went to the Philippines and thoroughly investigated his whole service.
Sandman, I think the transplant is a cure because the person no longer has the condition ESRD. When the doctor perscribes medications for HIV disease to keep it under control so as to prevent AIDS from appearing, this is not a cure, but keeps the HIV (virus) under control.
I have spoken to two people who got functioning kidneys through Mitch's facilitation efforts. They are both doing fine. I have spoken to four patients in the Philippines who received kidneys from the same doctors who work with Mitch, and who also bought a kidney from a live donor, though not through doctors working for Mitch at the time. They too are all doing fine.
Angie, Our price haven't been changing. Our web site gives the range and describes it.------------------____________________________Mr. Geoffcamp- You asked the right questions. We provide most of what you asked for to serious patients but not those reporters . Part of my job is to screen patient and weed out the reporters. What are you trying to hide? If you think this is so great why not advertise it? Let the world know about it. Why not let a reporter get the story and publicize it?
Quote from: mitchorganbroker on September 20, 2006, 12:24:46 AMAngie, Our price haven't been changing. Our web site gives the range and describes it.------------------____________________________Mr. Geoffcamp- You asked the right questions. We provide most of what you asked for to serious patients but not those reporters . Part of my job is to screen patient and weed out the reporters. What are you trying to hide? If you think this is so great why not advertise it? Let the world know about it. Why not let a reporter get the story and publicize it?
I have spoken to two of Mitch's patients who had transplants in the Philippines, returned to their own countries, and had no problems with follow-up care. One of the patients had the full cooperation from his nephrologist from the start and so, when he returned, he was welcomed back as a post-transplant patient by the same nephrologist who had taken care of him as a dialysis patient. The other simply re-typed all the medical reports from the Philippines on stationery with no letterhead, showed it to a local nephrologist whom he told he had had a transplant from a cousin in another Western country, and he was accepted into the follow-up program. Medical doctors follow a very strict code of professional practice which requires them not to abandon patients or deny care, and so they conceive of themselves first and foremost as helpers of the sick, not as enforcers of government regulations, especially when these are based on ignorance of the real problems sick people face. Many doctors I have spoken with, like an ever increasing number of academic medical ethicists, regard buying an organ for transplant as perfectly ethical.While some countries make the sale of organs for transplant illegal, there are many which do not. Some countries' laws make it illegal for their citizens to travel abroad for a purchased transplant from a live donor, but other countries restrict such paid donations only within their borders. The constitutions of many nations do not permit them to legislate extraterritorially, so they cannot regulate what their citizens do in another country. Many countries that do make paid organ donations illegal punish violations of these laws with purely tokenal fines, and the vast majority of such jurisdictions never bother enforcing such laws, because the governments are sensible enough to realize that these regulations are unjust, and are just needed to pander to the outrage of the uninformed populace.