I'm not sure where the hypocrisy is. The officers are being paid market value for their work. I can't tell how long it took to have that much of a fund balance. Do you want them to give some cash to everyone on dialysis in the greater Los Angeles area? There must be thousands of patients.
While the organizations which coordinate the cadaver organ donation, also known as Organ Procurement Organizations (OPO) are usually not-for-profit, public charities, their leadership receives pretty good salaries.In Los Angeles, it's OneLegacy.Annual salaries:Thomas Mone, CEO & EVP: $631,964.Chowdary Garimella, COO & VP Operations: $487,087.Davis Grafty, CFO & VP Finance: $290,498.The organization has a fund balance (profit over time) of over $30,000,000.Investment income: $363,682.http://www.guidestar.org/FinDocuments/2011/953/138/2011-953138799-08aab7de-9.pdf
I don't think giving cash to dialysis patients is going to help increase the pool of donors - living or deceased.
We need to start to provide lifelong coverage for immunosuppressive therapy after kidney transplant because it is a waste loosing a kidney after the 3 year cutoff date creating additional expense for medicare and is dangerous for the patient.
I wonder just how many kidney patients would be able to pay for a new kidney. ESRD can ruin you financially.
NDXUFan, how do you define "the transplant industry"?
Quote from: jeannea on July 13, 2013, 04:42:23 PMI'm not sure where the hypocrisy is. The officers are being paid market value for their work. I can't tell how long it took to have that much of a fund balance. Do you want them to give some cash to everyone on dialysis in the greater Los Angeles area? There must be thousands of patients.I don't think giving cash to dialysis patients is going to help increase the pool of donors - living or deceased. I'm not sure what point you were trying to make there. However, I see nothing wrong with compensating a donor for their time - like Australia's health system is now doing. I also don't see a problem with some of that UNOS money going to pay for deceased donor's funeral services. To me, that is not greed, but a fair compensation for a major gift/event. I would only support it if Medicare and/or private insurance covered that payment. I do not think it should be up to the individual organ transplant recipient. So, you are asserting that third party decision makers should be making decisions that will not effective their basic existence in life?KarenInWA
The hipocrisy is claiming that paying donors would be "unfair" since not everyone could afford to pay a donor, however, the wallet biopsy is the most critical component of the workup process.