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We are, it seems, full of admiration for parents who risk their own health in order to provide a better future for their children.
But why, then, do we condemn those who wish to donate a kidney in return for cash? After all, many would use the money to enhance the life chances of their little ones — a situation that seems identical, in all morally relevant respects, to that of Mrs Herrin.
A free market in kidneys would not only augment the wealth and autonomy of willing donors but would eliminate the chronic shortage of vital tissue. In the UK alone more than 5,500 people are on the kidney waiting list. It is estimated that 100,000 die worldwide each year while waiting in vain for a life-saving operation. It is a scandal that this mass suffering is permitted to continue when it could be eradicated with a simple change in the law.
The arguments against a free market are not merely misguided but perverse. Critics talk darkly about the wealthy jumping the queue and mutter incoherently about the exploitation of the most vulnerable. As Pope John Paul II wrote: “Buying and selling organs violates the dignity of the human person.”
The truth is precisely the reverse. The prohibition on payments to living donors has driven the market underground, making it an option available only to the rich. Desperate patients have been known to pay up to £100,000 to shady brokers who pocket the lion’s share, leaving Third World donors with a pittance. Back-street surgeons conduct transplants with scant regard to tissue typing and histocompatibility.
In a properly regulated market the donor would receive the full price for the organ and would be interviewed to ensure that they have given informed consent. A monopsony buyer, such as the NHS, would set a price so as to eliminate shortages and then make kidneys available “free at the point of use” according to clinical need.
A market in kidneys would alleviate the needless suffering of thousands while eliminating the abuses and injustices of the black market. It is the current, failed system that is a violation of human dignity.
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I agree, I would sell one of mine for $400,000 in a heart beat. > name the place.
Robert, wis. dells, wisconsin
the goverment must act now. it is so very, very easy to stop this mindless suffering. my mother is on dialysis 3 times a week. i live in LA and when I come to visit her at Northwick Park Hospital, I am struck by the awful situation of the patients who sit connected to a blood cleaning machine for 4 hours at a time. these people are depressed beyond belief. it is a life sentence of misery and waiting to die. my mother usually has one or 2 days a week when she has a little energy for shopping. her diet is limited and eating many foods that we all take for granted could stop her heart for good - a pottassium overload is poison. there is pottassium in most foods. there is no warning. the heart just stops and cannot be restarted. when there is so much poverty, and so many willing donors, why is the possibility of kidney transplantation so remote? the government must change the laws now so that these people can live again.
stephanie, pinner,