Going around in the Philippines and looking like someone from the Western world is like wearing a giant sign proclaiming, "Cheat me! I'm a foreign millionaire!" which is how the local people see you. Every price you hear quoted, every deal you think is settled, will be changed at the last minute to your disadvantage, and the Philippine court system is in such a shambles that it takes decades to follow a case to its conclusion.The result is that if you want to get a kidney in the Philippines, you need the assistance of a facilitator with a lot of local connections who knows how to play the system against itself. That is the only way you can defend yourself against the local medical system, which will take every penny you have and then some if you don't have an experienced and powerful person on your side to keep them in line.
Believe me, absolutely the last thing on earth the plantation masters of the U.S. dialysis system are ever going to suspect is that one of their 'slaves' is going to escape their control by buying an organ from a live donor abroad!
Why the hell do we have to go all the way to the Philippines when there are North American sites like: matchingdonors
But the most important reason is that many transplant centers in the U.S., and nearly all transplant centers in Canada, absolutely refuse to consider performing transplants on altruistic, unrelated donors, because they presumptively assume that they must be being paid, and try as you might, you can never convince them otherwise.
Someone who gets a kidney real fast won't appreciate their situation as much as someone who waits for a transplant.
Quote from: stauffenberg on September 29, 2006, 04:03:52 PMBut the most important reason is that many transplant centers in the U.S., and nearly all transplant centers in Canada, absolutely refuse to consider performing transplants on altruistic, unrelated donors, because they presumptively assume that they must be being paid, and try as you might, you can never convince them otherwise.Is this really true? At least in my center I was very much encouraged for living donors and I was recommended to "talk to family, friends and workplace colleagues and have them call us".
Zach, of course you must realize that there is no logical inconsistency between my saying that "many" U.S. transplant centers will not accept unrelated, altruistic donors, and your saying that "many" will.