I'm confused, MM, I thought you liked the idea of a tightly regulated market for organs?
MM, I may ask your permission to use a point or two that you've raised in another thread (not about selling organs). I'll send you a PM and explain more if I decide to go this direction with the paper.
I know this is controversial (though I do not understand why!!!) but obesity makes more sense as a symptom of disease, not a cause. They correlate, that does not mean in any way shape or form that one can say that one causes the other. Poor diet (whatever that might mean, as it's so individual) will certainly contribute or cause ill health, but not everyone with a poor diet is obese or even close. Lack of adequate exercise also contributes to poor health, but again, plenty of thin people do not get enough exercise. OK, I just had to reiterate that. I look forward to the comments questioning my intelligence/sanity/ulterior motives.
Hemodoc, I understand why you have not looked deeper into transplantation for yourself, and considering your history, I don't blame you. You are the one who will have to live with the consequences of your choices, and you don't want to have to live with the fear of cancer. Don't choose to live with fear if you don't have to.
I agree that it is probably not possible to have true informed consent for much of anything renal. There is still so much we don't know in both the fields of transplantation and dialysis.How do you feel about some sort of financial compensation for families of deceased donors? Do you think that would encourage more families to consider donation if a loved one died? Would it encourage states to set up an opt-out system? Or do you see yet another ethical quagmire?
No, I actually hate the idea, but I think it may be necessary if we are truly serious about reducing the number of people waiting for organs. The bottom line is that the lists are growing but the number of organs available for transplantation are not keeping up with demand, and we have to decide if we are going to seriously address this problem or if we're just going to sit around and keep talking about it. Doing nothing will result in more people dying or more people waiting a longer time on dialysis, and I am not sure that it is ethical to let that happen if we do not have to. I personally do not believe that relying solely on the altruism of others is going to make more organs available.
I'm also rather uncomfortable with the paternalistic idea that the monolithic poor aren't to be trusted to make good decisions for themselves.
I absolutely abhor the idea of anyone being exploited, especially those who are having financial difficulty and those who are ill and depend on a machine to live. But there comes a time when you have to trust people to make their own decisions in life. Perhaps I am pro-choice in many ways.
Sure.
As usual Cariad you are spot on.Ed
And Okarol, that's an interesting point, that everyone seems to make money off transplants except for the donor/donor family. I had not thought of that.
Now, maybe I can sleep.
White Castles are open 24 hours a day, every day, but dialysis clinics are not. They should be open all day, every day, and it is unethical for them not to be. It is unethical for the medical profession to offer sub-optimal treatment because of cost and/or inertia.
Cariad, sorry, I didn't mean to imply that YOU have a paternalistic attitude. Far from it.
I think it is a Medicare requirement that all new dialysis patients are told about the option of transplantation. I printed off some ProPublica bumph about my clinic, and yes, there is a question asking how many new patients were "offered" transplants. Of course, the clinic isn't the entity that actually "offers" said surgery; it is the tx center, and just because patients are supposed to be informed doesn't mean they will even read the evaluation stage. My 76 year old mother was asked if she would like to be referred for an evaluation, and I don't really think they thought she would be a suitable candidate, but I think they were mandated to ask, anyway.
Did you read that recent article about patients at for-profit dialysis clinics receiving 20% fewer transplants!!!! I just read a bit of anthropology, vetted by my prof for whom I am writing a paper, about the eval process.
The more we discuss any sort of market for organs, the more I think that we are talking about two different populations here. The altruists/people who know and love those in renal failure and are willing/able to donate, and those who want to turn a quick buck. Make the field palatable to one population and you turn off the other one.
I think people in renal failure are in the weakest position to ask for further public funds to pay for organs because we do have options, and people who come off dialysis do not always enjoy long lives with a transplant (even members who have passed away after transplant).
I think people with power in our society want to be able to buy organs, because their sense of self does not include accepting charity of any sort, and if they want to preserve their sense of self, by god society should be forced to accommodate them.
Informed consent is another sticky wicket (and yes I am using a sport metaphor without knowing thing one about the sport!) Where does informed consent end? No one can predict what will happen to the individual. When does informed consent become 'needlessly scaring the potential donor'? How much onus do we place on the potential donor to ask the questions that concern them?
They also have found that donors sustain psychological damage from the process (thanks, Canada!) and since psychological health is not on most surgeon's Great List of Important Things, I think it needs to be put there.
A simplistic view (sorry, I get completely and utterly confused by cariad and MMs posts!) from a living donor:
I was made aware of all the risks.
In a future world where people are paid for donating body parts, would I be paid more than the altruistic donor who may simply breeze in, sell their kidney and breeze back out again, thinking they've 'saved a life' and spending eternity patting themselves on the back for a job well done, but never actually knowing, or even caring about the recipient (after all, they have their money in the bank; it was a simple transaction)?
And, if the kidney fails to take can the recipient get their money back because the product wasn't fit for purpose?
I'll have to wait for a time when I'm not feeling so depressed.
It's true that those in renal failure do have options, but I think it might be unfair to suggest that dialysis is a good option for all people. Some are able to do do fairly well on dialysis, but others wither quickly, and you don't always know into which catagory a particular patient may fall.
Since I've never had power in our society, it is hard for me to imagine anyone thinking along these lines. But again, I don't think anyone should ever, even if we had a tightly regulated market, be able to buy an organ for themselves. I guess, however, that those with power and money could find a way to do anything they want. Do you think that rich people now can buy organs for themselves? Does anyone know how Steve Jobs got his liver transplant in such a timely manner? I would have thought him ineligible for transplant due to his history with pancreatic cancer, but maybe his money talked. Anyone know?
Doctors consistently ignore psychological damage/health. My nephrologist is very well respected in the area where I live, and he is very knowledgeable. He is, however, a Human Eeyore. In the seven years I have been seeing him, he has never addressed the emotional/psychological impact of CKD. I'm certain this is commonplace.