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. KarenInWA
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.
If they are wrong about what?
That tells me nothing about them and a lot about people not willing to be donors. You still haven't said what they would be so wrong about that they should pay. There are millions of people who won't donate when they're dead and definitely won't when alive. That speaks to their values.
Altruistic donation would be at risk of a paid donor system. The new paired donations and donor chains has improved matching kidneys and most of these are started by an unrelated altruistic donor. The numbers of altruistic donors is on the rise.The real issue with the high number of people on the organ wait list for kidney patients is the large number of patients who could have prevented ESRD by poor control of obesity which leads to HTN and diabetes and CKD all on its own. Addressing prevention is the best way to impact the number of renal transplants needed.As far as effects on donors, there are absolute risks of renal donation with a small percentage who die from the procedure. Vendors in Pakistan and other nations demonstrate no long term economic benefit and at increased risk of physical debility. http://organdonorincentives.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/AST-Pakistan.pdfThis is at the heart of the ethical considerations using a paid organ system where the coercion of the financial gain could lead someone to place their on life at risk. In addition, the poor and disenfranchised would be the fodder for such a system which sets off an entirely different aspect of the ethical concerns when considering an organ market.It is simply a bad idea ethically and practically, who is going to pay for these things? Exploitation of poor people who would consider selling a kidney is an ethical situation we should not venture.
Quote from: Hemodoc on September 24, 2013, 05:43:26 PMAltruistic donation would be at risk of a paid donor system. The new paired donations and donor chains has improved matching kidneys and most of these are started by an unrelated altruistic donor. The numbers of altruistic donors is on the rise.The real issue with the high number of people on the organ wait list for kidney patients is the large number of patients who could have prevented ESRD by poor control of obesity which leads to HTN and diabetes and CKD all on its own. Addressing prevention is the best way to impact the number of renal transplants needed.As far as effects on donors, there are absolute risks of renal donation with a small percentage who die from the procedure. Vendors in Pakistan and other nations demonstrate no long term economic benefit and at increased risk of physical debility. http://organdonorincentives.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/AST-Pakistan.pdfThis is at the heart of the ethical considerations using a paid organ system where the coercion of the financial gain could lead someone to place their on life at risk. In addition, the poor and disenfranchised would be the fodder for such a system which sets off an entirely different aspect of the ethical concerns when considering an organ market.It is simply a bad idea ethically and practically, who is going to pay for these things? Exploitation of poor people who would consider selling a kidney is an ethical situation we should not venture.NDXUFan:HemoDoc, we agree on many issues in the dialysis industry. However, the claim that obesity causes diabetes has simply not been proven. To blame dialysis patients for that issue is intellectually false and intellectually lazy. Every Academic Nephrologist has told me that the cause of type II diabetes is simply unknown. If you are interested, I am willing to give your their names and institutions, privately. Distinguished Professor of Nephrology Jerome Kassirer and Former Head Editor of the New England Journal of Medicine has stated in public that, "Losing weight does not improve your health." Who is going to pay for these things, who is currently paying for dialysis at $100,000 per year to our pal, Kent Thiry and the Billing King, Davita? Who is being forced to give a kidney, as you know, fraud is punishable by law. I worked in the welfare building in a major metro area and when people run out of arguments, they cite the poor. This argument has been used for years and years. Is it ethical to give someone a kidney transplant or force them to be tortured by Thiry and Davita the Billing King? Unlike most of you, I have worked with the poor for many years, I think that argument is total bunk or bullhockey. If you want to talk about group in need of ethics, Thiry, Davita, and Fresenius need to be in the front of the line. Ethics is a matter of subjective opinion and in that area, Davita and Fresenius are receiving an "F." You think we could not afford kidney transplants compared to what we are paying your buddies at the Billing King, you have to be joking? So, I am curious, who appointed you as the decision maker of costs and benefits for someone else? We already have a system like that now, how is that working for you and the other patients? The donor has the most to lose, why cannot they not be compensated for that risk? You were compensated for the risk, time, effort, and med school, it took to become a physician. I am curious, why should you have been compensated for those factors and the kidney donor should not be? I have to laugh like crazy about people who are making out like corporate executives who state that donors should not be paid. Many of these individuals need to be told to mind their own business and practice what they preach, which the majority of the time, they consistently fail to do.
Quote from: NDXUFan on September 24, 2013, 08:11:13 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on September 24, 2013, 05:43:26 PMAltruistic donation would be at risk of a paid donor system. The new paired donations and donor chains has improved matching kidneys and most of these are started by an unrelated altruistic donor. The numbers of altruistic donors is on the rise.The real issue with the high number of people on the organ wait list for kidney patients is the large number of patients who could have prevented ESRD by poor control of obesity which leads to HTN and diabetes and CKD all on its own. Addressing prevention is the best way to impact the number of renal transplants needed.As far as effects on donors, there are absolute risks of renal donation with a small percentage who die from the procedure. Vendors in Pakistan and other nations demonstrate no long term economic benefit and at increased risk of physical debility. http://organdonorincentives.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/AST-Pakistan.pdfThis is at the heart of the ethical considerations using a paid organ system where the coercion of the financial gain could lead someone to place their on life at risk. In addition, the poor and disenfranchised would be the fodder for such a system which sets off an entirely different aspect of the ethical concerns when considering an organ market.It is simply a bad idea ethically and practically, who is going to pay for these things? Exploitation of poor people who would consider selling a kidney is an ethical situation we should not venture.NDXUFan:HemoDoc, we agree on many issues in the dialysis industry. However, the claim that obesity causes diabetes has simply not been proven. To blame dialysis patients for that issue is intellectually false and intellectually lazy. Every Academic Nephrologist has told me that the cause of type II diabetes is simply unknown. If you are interested, I am willing to give your their names and institutions, privately. Distinguished Professor of Nephrology Jerome Kassirer and Former Head Editor of the New England Journal of Medicine has stated in public that, "Losing weight does not improve your health." Who is going to pay for these things, who is currently paying for dialysis at $100,000 per year to our pal, Kent Thiry and the Billing King, Davita? Who is being forced to give a kidney, as you know, fraud is punishable by law. I worked in the welfare building in a major metro area and when people run out of arguments, they cite the poor. This argument has been used for years and years. Is it ethical to give someone a kidney transplant or force them to be tortured by Thiry and Davita the Billing King? Unlike most of you, I have worked with the poor for many years, I think that argument is total bunk or bullhockey. If you want to talk about group in need of ethics, Thiry, Davita, and Fresenius need to be in the front of the line. Ethics is a matter of subjective opinion and in that area, Davita and Fresenius are receiving an "F." You think we could not afford kidney transplants compared to what we are paying your buddies at the Billing King, you have to be joking? So, I am curious, who appointed you as the decision maker of costs and benefits for someone else? We already have a system like that now, how is that working for you and the other patients? The donor has the most to lose, why cannot they not be compensated for that risk? You were compensated for the risk, time, effort, and med school, it took to become a physician. I am curious, why should you have been compensated for those factors and the kidney donor should not be? I have to laugh like crazy about people who are making out like corporate executives who state that donors should not be paid. Many of these individuals need to be told to mind their own business and practice what they preach, which the majority of the time, they consistently fail to do.Actually, I am quite familiar with Jerome, he was my ex-sister in laws Mentor at Harvard. My ex-wife often had dinner with Jerome. Nevertheless, there is a definite correlation between obesity and Type II diabetes. Not sure where you got your information, but that is not in dispute. You state it has not been "proven." Well shucks, that applies to about 2/3rds of medicine. So thanks for calling me a liar and lazy, but no thanks.Jerome's contention is that calling obesity a disease fuels the billion dollar industry dealing in pharmaceuticals and such. He has a point with that, but understanding the mechanism of insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and diabetes, yes there is an absolute correlation with obesity.As far as your considerations of my ethical constraints, just because you disagree with my position does not make intellectually dishonest and lazy. Get a grip man.
There is strong correlation between weight gain /obesity and type 2 diabetes. I have treated diabetics for 25 years and was trained in a residency with diabetes as the main disease we saw. The research is clear and real life patients back it up. The trend toward higher weight now in society and increase in diabetes incidence is strongly correlated. Insulin resistance ocurrs often with obesity because fat cells are an organ themselves and they secrete hormones that cause insulin resistance . More and larger fat cells leads to insulin resistance. That is not a drug industry lie. I have many issues with the pharm industry but this isnt one of them. Lets all play nice here also. Getting personal isnt going to help anyone.
I'd say this is relevant: Popular Science (the magazine) is shutting off their comment section online. As the article says a "politically motivated, decades-long war on expertise has eroded the popular consensus on a wide variety of scientifically validated topics. Everything, from evolution to the origins of climate change, is mistakenly up for grabs again." Now too even the impact of obesity on diabetes is something anonymous internet commentators call into question. Trolling the internet is all very amusing but trolling debases the the community, it corrodes understanding. Trolling isn't harmless.
Quote from: obsidianom on September 25, 2013, 12:44:35 PMThere is strong correlation between weight gain /obesity and type 2 diabetes. I have treated diabetics for 25 years and was trained in a residency with diabetes as the main disease we saw. The research is clear and real life patients back it up. The trend toward higher weight now in society and increase in diabetes incidence is strongly correlated. Insulin resistance ocurrs often with obesity because fat cells are an organ themselves and they secrete hormones that cause insulin resistance . More and larger fat cells leads to insulin resistance. That is not a drug industry lie. I have many issues with the pharm industry but this isnt one of them. Lets all play nice here also. Getting personal isnt going to help anyone. Ok, then, why are Academic Nephrologists with many years of experience telling me that they do not know what causes Type II diabetes? The Mayo and The Cleveland Clinic have stated that they did not know what causes diabetes. [/quoI realized the problem here. You are thinking in absolutes. This thing or that thing are THE cause of an illness.. That is a common error people make. medicine doesn't really work that way. Most problems are a complex combination of factors with genetics being the most important.Yes I would agree we don't know exactly what CAUSES diabetes .But we do know that some of the factors are genetics, diet and weight. It is almost a combination of these and possibly other factors. Just because weight alone doesn't cause diabetes , doesn't mean it isn't related strongly. You can always point to people who beat the odds. Just look at how SOME smokers can live to be 100 . That dosesnt prove smoking doesn't kill. Its just that some people defy the odds. Its all odds and percentages , but rarely absolute. I am smart enough to know we don't have all the answers. We just have educated guesses. medicine is an ART, NOT a SCIENCE. Remember that. Your science people sometimes forget that.
"My view is that individuals do not have the right to force their beliefs on other people, it is just that simple".Hmm, seems to me that is exactly what you are trying to do, and furthermore, not respecting the opinions of others. Just a question. Why are you so defensive about the link between obesity and diabetes?
One other point on weight gain and diabetes. There is a growing body of STRONG evidence that weight loss or bariatric surgery is a complete CURE for many diabetics. I have several patients of my own that this worked for.. they were very obese and on many oral daibetes meds with poor control. Then after the surgery and weight loss , no more meds at all and no glucose problems. This is another indicator that weight is related in some manner. Again it is not the ONLY cause but one strong factor. I am not a proponent of surgery in general as i was trained as a surgeon and am now very much anti many surgeries and no longer perform anything except minor office procedures. I have seen many sugeries go bad including my wife having a paralyzed stomach from a failed Fundiplication for GERD. She lives on a feeding tube now for food and water. of course this makes her dialysis easier as she has a "perfect"diet'. So I am not advocating bariatric surgery, only using it as an example of a cure for diabetes based on weight loss.
This is at the heart of the ethical considerations using a paid organ system where the coercion of the financial gain could lead someone to place their on life at risk.
QuoteThis is at the heart of the ethical considerations using a paid organ system where the coercion of the financial gain could lead someone to place their on life at risk. The same could be said of coal mining, police work, fire fighting or working as a convenience store clerk - all cases of placing one's life at risk for financial gain.And there is the job of "royal organ donor" (yes, really) in at least one country where a peasant is type matched to the king and given a great life - in return for agreeing to donate ANY organ should the king need it.