I wish I could help you understand more. Maybe some of the mentioned articles will provide interesting reading when you have time. (P.S: I know I don't sound very educated in this posting. It's late and right now, I think I could fail basic ESL!)
lifetime is not making a market transaction; they're falling prey to desperation.
At the same time, nobody is going to want to "turn them in." With the US prison system the way it is, I think any move in this direction will lead to likely failure of the transplant, which doesn't really serve anybody's best interest.
...and then, there are those transplant tourists that have made connections with well-developed networks. There are international ties with those involved in a hospital in their domestic country and the country where they have received the organ. When they return home, the medical clinics and doctors provide all the adequate care needed because they are "in the know" and receive a cut of the profits. Psychology Today wrote in "Body Snatchers: Organ Harvesting For Profit" that "Black market organs are being transplanted in New York, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles at $150,000 a pop...there are "broker-friendly" US hospitals, complete with surgeons who either don't know or don't care where the organs come from." That raises a whole other issue: the domestic organ trafficking trade.
Just because a transaction is made out of desperation, does not mean it is not a "market transaction". Real up on econ 101
I would think if they could afford to fly to a foreighn country and buy a kidney, they could afford to pay out of pocket for any doctor visit and any anti-rejection drug they would need back in the U.S.
The front end costs probably pale in comparison to the cost of the aftercare, but we never hear about the costs (or availability) of the aftercare, which is what I am asking about.
This issue is only "simple" when you are not talking about paying the donor a life-changing amount of money.
And, there is a secondary issue - if a rich person buys an overseas kidney, that moves everyone after him/her up the list one place.
The US law against paying for organs is based on the principle of equality, and "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need". Some guy names Marx tried that and we all know how that worked out.
I want to get back to this, because it is not what the US system looks like.
Wealthy people gaming the system. Meh. I'm not a huge fan but it's hard to see how to stop it.
QuoteWealthy people gaming the system. Meh. I'm not a huge fan but it's hard to see how to stop it.Putting an end to listing at multiple centers would curtail the easiest way for big $$ to move themselves up the list.
how can we point to ethical restrictions between consenting donor and donee?