But the general problem is that the medical profession, under their motto of "First, do no harm," has a strong bias AGAINST accepting a kidney donor,
I'm in the UK and they do allow ultrustic donors. I have had 8 people go for tissue typing and only 1 one is a relative. I feel the dialysis unit is only there because of patients like me. It must be run differently to the States as the only people who could make money out of it is who ever supplies the stock to run the dialysis machines. I don't feel as though I'm a slave to the centre. I might be a slave to kidney failure, but that I will have to live with that for the rest of my life regardless if I have a transplant which I have or if it is on dialysis.While I agree a transplant is a better form of treatment it is by far not a cure and gives you another form risks. I do not think this is the debate. My concern is buying Body parts in an unregulated fashion. To me this would create slavery where people are so desperate for money that they have to sell of a body part. How can you say there is no duress when someone is so desperate for money. They might not be forced into donating by another person, but forced into it by circumstance and I'm sure brokers will target these individuals and sell them the dream. How many kidney sellers get themselves out of poverty by selling one of their kidneys? In an ideal world I would not be against buying a kidney if it was State controlled. Where the State would buy kidneys from the public on a voluntary manner and then send them to the transplant centre that had the best patient match as they do with cadevaric organs. In theory the State would be able to pay for the cost of donors from the money it saves against dialysis costs. I did say an ideal world. Unfortunately for me brokers do not fall into this category of an ideal world.
Alisdair, I began dialysis in 1996 in England and was dialized at four different centers during my time there. My typical experience as a dialysis out-patient was that I had to wait at least 45 minutes for my treatment session, since the staff insisted that the patients arrived on time but did not return the courtesy by being punctual for our needs as well. The dialysis room had one loud, blaring television set bolted to the ceiling for thirty treatment stations, and there was no way to change the channel. The dialysis machines themselves were so old and contained so many bio-incompatible elements that I always vomited after each treatment in the taxi ride home.....
As for the morality of buying a kidney for a poor person, why do you assume that a bargain which a poor person finds profitable to him to accept necessarily has to be illegitimate? How do we harm people who because of their extreme poverty will die early, suffer poor health, perhaps starve, have miserable facilities in which to live, and be unable to provide for their families if we deny them the only way out of the trap they are in by calling it, from our position of material comfort in the West, 'morally unacceptable'? The $7000 Philippine kidney donors get provides them with the money to send their children to school, pay off their mortgage, and open a small shop for themselves where they can guarantee themselves employment for the rest of their lives in a country where the unemployment rate is 25%. Is that bargain exploitative if the person accepting it voluntarily is of the view that it is to his benefit?
- I think a transplant is a cure to ESRD, since this disease is no longer in the patient.
The amount should get them out of poverty however better still would be for that concerned British person to get him a job in the UK, to keep an eye on the chap, as well as signing his UK VISA application and flying him to Heathrow. Then after 6 months or so of working in UK, he gets to have his own British Health System to cover his health needs.
Transplants do not last forever as the body's natural defense fights it off! If it is a CURE then why don't I still have my transplant?? And the fact that I am BACK on dialysis after I had a transplant ... if "this disease in no longer in the patient" then what is this I have now? A NEW DISEASE???
Alisdair, I began dialysis in 1996 in England and was dialized at four different centers during my time there. My typical experience as a dialysis out-patient was that I had to wait at least 45 minutes for my treatment session, since the staff insisted that the patients arrived on time but did not return the courtesy by being punctual for our needs as well. The dialysis room had one loud, blaring television set bolted to the ceiling for thirty treatment stations, and there was no way to change the channel. The dialysis machines themselves were so old and contained so many bio-incompatible elements that I always vomited after each treatment in the taxi ride home. Instead of the nephrologists coming around to see the patients during treatment as they usually do in North America so as to save the patients' already much-reduced free time, the nephrologists made us come to their clinic, where we also had to wait hours, in addition to the three treatments a week. I never felt as if the NHS or the British taxpayer cared a whit whether we patients lived or died. Even when I was in three of the 'leading' hospitals of London when I first developed renal failure, I was so much ignored by the doctors that my hemoglobin feel to 60 simply because no one ever bothered to check it, since I was classified for four months as an 'acute' renal patient, and that class of patients normally gets well in a week or two so there is no need to give Epo or to check hemoglobin levels. In short, I was treated like dirt.
In theory a transplant is not a cure for endstage renal failure, but is instead just another mode of treatment, like dialysis, since a foreign kidney maintained in an unnatural location in the body by immunosuppressive drugs is not a natural condition, but an ongoing medical intervention. However, in terms of the way the patient feels and lives while the donor organ lasts -- which can easily be 20 years from the kind of young, carefully selected, well matched kidney you can obtain from a live donor in the Philippines -- life with a transplant is FUNCTIONALLY EQUIVALENT to perfectly healthy life.
Having to remember to take a handful of pills morning and evening and having to visit the doctor every few months represents a trivial difference between normal human existence and the existence of a transplant patient, but is miniscule compared to the difference from the normal standard of the life of a dialysis patient.
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.
Me personally, I am content the US keeps coming up with moral ,ethical or other silliness as to why they don't legalize paid donors. Many people on this forum howled that those in the Philippines were immoral and questioned if we had the brains to inform the donors of the risks.But when they thought "a Medical Tourism Program" would do a transplant for $25,000., all that moral B.S. went out the window. That gloating was short lived, when new post showed Philippine Daily Inquirer, wrote the Under secretary Del Mundo head of Medical Tourism says you need to bring your own related kidney donor and says it costs 3 million peso,( $60,000.not counting the donor))( not $25,000)
In 2004, the Philippine Heart Center (PHC) had as many as 4,000 patients waiting for heart surgery. At the National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI), there are over 180 patients in the waiting list for kidney transplants.Many of these patients may die even before they get the treatment they need.“What happens to these patients when PHC and NKTI open up their doors to foreign patients?" he asked.He pointed out that heart surgeries and kidney transplants are also expensive for most Filipinos. A kidney transplant will cost a payingpatient between P1million and P1.5 million while a charity patient will have to shell out almost P500,000 even if the kidneys are donated for free. But rather than act to make these procedures more affordable, government agencies are now advertising these procedures as “cheaper” alternatives for foreigners.
If helping ESRD patients get transplanted makes me a pimp, what name should we call people who scare ESRD patients into trapping themselves in that dialysis prison ?
Quote from: mitchorganbroker on October 03, 2006, 05:49:46 AM If helping ESRD patients get transplanted makes me a pimp, what name should we call people who scare ESRD patients into trapping themselves in that dialysis prison ?Angie and I are not suggesting or recommending that ESRD patients not get transplants, we're recommending that if they decide to get a transplant, they should not get it through you.
Your marketing technique is interesting to me. Fear, intimidation, belittling and/or demeaning your potential customers; how's that working out for you? I would never consider getting a transplant through your organization, largely because of the methods you've employed to attract business. Your whole approach seems unsavory to me. I don't see you as someone that I could trust with my very life.
"WHILE kidney selling is a deeply stigmatized act in Moldova, it has become a routine event in slums and shantytowns half a world away in the Filipino capital of Manila. This is despite the fact that the operation has put a great many young men permanently out of work, Kidney sellers say they are no longer able to lift heavy cargoes. 'No-one wants a kidney seller on his work team,' an unemployed father of three told us while his wife fumed at him from a distance."
Mallory, when you quote to me anecdotes from a newspaper article suggesting that there are enormous health problems in donating a spare kidney in reply to my citation of articles by professors of medicine, published in prestigious, peer-reviewed, professional medical journals, backed by controlled studies and rigorous statistical analysis, then I think even you would agree that the journalist's sensationalism cannot compare with the medical opinion that donating a kidney is essentially harmless.
Zach, as you know, science is based on averages, not on anecdotes. With respect to the average half-life of a kidney from a living donor, for the scientific as opposed to the anecdotal information you have to consult a scientific work, such as Professor D. E. Hricik's "Renal Transplantion" (2003) p. 5, where he writes: "... between 1988 and 1995, the projected half-life of a living-donor transplanted kidney increased from 12.7 years to 21.6 years during this time period, while the half-life of a cadaver-donor kidney insreaded from 7.9 to 13.8 years ... ." That is where I got my information for writing that a living-donor kidney could be expected to last around 20 years on average.
Mallory, Angie, Yes you are for transplants, as long as it is FREE. The expectation of a naive altruistic free donor coming along to risk his life for a selfish person is outrageous. It's about money with you guys. Angie, all the free medical services and free housing in Canada , did you contribute 1 % or less when you were working?
The Pro and con: Pro -Live matched donor in two weeks , . In one month you are are free from dialysis.and NORMAL Then you live a normal life as before. The con It's not free , you have to pay for it. Your medicare is useless in an other country. You have to put up with insults from the ignorant . You will tremble from all the propaganda , repeated mostly by ignorant peers.Questions for you thinkers : If you travel to an other state for a transplant , is that medical Tourism ? Is it only medical tourism if you travel to an other country.? Is the highly paid man working at a US hospital, who helps you get a kidney transplant called a broker ? Is he a transplant coordinator or a dirty broker. Who is the person to blame for preventing you from getting a kidney transplant ? Is it the slow moving altruistic guy or the druggy who hasn't crashed into a tree yet.? The answer is in your mirror.
Sandman , Mallory uses BS articles from unsavory rags. That stuff is not medical journals. Actually it's from reporters who are paid to propagandize about foreign transplants. That's how they make a living. Both normal kidneys work at the same time but do not need to work very hard to get the job done.
How many transplants has Mitch arranged? How many years has he been providing this service?This is no question that a functioning kidney is better than not having one. That's not the issue.I'm looking at it simply as a business deal--risks vs. benefits.Source: United Network of Organ Sharing (UNOS) Scientific Renal Transplant RegistryOPTN/SRTR Data as of May 2, 2005.10 Years = 1993-2003 --Yes, a lot has changed in the anti-rejection medications since 1993. But there is still the problem of chronic rejection.http://www.optn.org/AR2005/default.htm
Zach, was the donor graft referring to only kidneys or all organs ?
Sandman , Mallory uses BS articles from unsavory rags. That stuff is not medical journals. Actually it's from reporters who are paid to propagandize about foreign transplants. That's how they make a living.
Mallory, Angie, Yes you are for transplants, as long as it is FREE. The expectation of a naive altruistic free donor coming along to risk his life for a selfish person is outrageous. It's about money with you guys.
Mallory, when you do your marketing are you facing people ignorant of the facts who insult you, calling you a pimp and wanting your product for free and asking for the component address, so they can go around you ?