Quote from: mogee on August 19, 2010, 11:49:08 PMIf there were an unregulated market in kidneys from living donors it would be hard to try to prevent the commercialization of cadaveric kidneys. Families would attach a price tag to the kidneys of their deceased kin and only the wealthy would get transplants.Everyone could get the deceased donor kidneys if there was a flat rate, paid by insurance. But then maybe a family would start bumping off dispensable cousins.... that might be a problem.
If there were an unregulated market in kidneys from living donors it would be hard to try to prevent the commercialization of cadaveric kidneys. Families would attach a price tag to the kidneys of their deceased kin and only the wealthy would get transplants.
If $5-$6K would do it, let those who can afford pay. Those who believe in "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need" would be offended it isn't "fair", but even those not paying would benefit from reduced stress on the list.
If there's money on the table, do you think some people might lie about their family health history? Or their drug use or other risky behaviors? Do you think a pimp might force a prostitute to go cash in her kidney? Or maybe a desperate spouse might pressure their husband or wife to donate? I don't really know, but these are things we should talk about.
Our daughter was given a kidney by a stranger we met through Living Donors Online. It is failing now so we've posted on facebook too. There are so many living donors who want nothing in return.
Quote from: okarol on December 31, 2012, 01:11:15 AMOur daughter was given a kidney by a stranger we met through Living Donors Online. It is failing now so we've posted on facebook too. There are so many living donors who want nothing in return. Karol, I really don't think there are "so many" otherwise you wouldn't have 90,000+ people on the list in a nation of 310 million people. You realize if less than 1 in 1000 peope donated the list would be wiped out?No doubt there are altruistic donors out there but it's still very hard to find someone like that. Look at the thread where our own family members won't even get tested!And why do you spell Karol instead of Carol?
3. That's what my parents named me.
Quote from: Jie on March 15, 2010, 09:40:36 PMTake it easy for buying and selling kidneys. If more than half of patients do buying, I would get my kidney very soon. So we, patients on the waiting list, are benefiting from this. Whether this law itself is moral or not is debable. This law is making more patients die each day.My wife is Filipino and it would have been very easy to by a kidney with my connections to the Phillipines which I would never do. I find it absolutely reprehensible that renal disease is now becoming an excuse for a new colonial behavior in the western world. This is most especially true when we consider that daily dialysis has equal survival to cadaveric transplant. The only manner in which to keep the facade of morality of selling organs is to ignore that proven fact. I will live or die with my renal disease but I will not enslave another human being by virtue of the wealth I have to escape it. Anyone that spends even a modicum of time on the plight of the poor that become organ vendors in Pakistan and other parts of the world would not view it as anything but an evil act of greed upon them by merchants treating them as a commodity. DSEN has many posts discussing the moral and ethical and medical reasons why this should never be allowed in this nation. http://www.billpeckham.com/from_the_sharp_end_of_the/2008/08/most-iranian-pa.htmlI applaud IHD and Okarol for her stand to maintain the standards of IHD.
Take it easy for buying and selling kidneys. If more than half of patients do buying, I would get my kidney very soon. So we, patients on the waiting list, are benefiting from this. Whether this law itself is moral or not is debable. This law is making more patients die each day.
Simon, there should be some REGULATED compensation with a MAXIMUM CAP of $5000 or $6000 if you donated a kidney. It would cost around 500 million dollars which a billionaire like Bloomberg or Gates could easily afford!Imagine the waiting list going from 92,000 to under 10,000? IF there was REGULATED compensation it could!