JANUARY 8, 2010
*The Meat Market
**In a race to prevent thousands of needless deaths a year, countries from
Singapore to Israel are launching innovative new programs to boost organ
donation. Alex Tabarrok on paying donors for kidneys, favoritism on waiting
lists and the shifting line between life and death.
*by Alex Tabarrok


Harvesting human organs for sale! The idea suggests the lurid world of
horror movies and 19th-century graverobbers. Yet right now, Singapore is
preparing to pay donors as much as $50,000 for their organs. Iran has
eliminated waiting lists for kidneys entirely by paying its citizens to
donate. Israel is implementing a "no give, no take" system that puts people
who opt out of the donor system at the bottom of the transplant waiting list
should they ever need an organ.

Millions of people suffer from kidney disease, but in 2007 there were just
64,606 kidney-transplant operations in the entire world. In the U.S. alone,
83,000 people wait on the official kidney-transplant list. But just 16,500
people received a kidney transplant in 2008, while almost 5,000 died waiting
for one.

View Full Image <http:///??.htm>
[image: Cover_Main] <http:///??.htm>
Photo illustration by Mick Coulas, photos: Alamy (heart), Photo Researchers
(lung, kidney)



*3,363*Americans who died waiting for a kidney transplant, January to
October 2009

To combat yet another shortfall, some American doctors are routinely
removing pieces of tissue from deceased patients for transplant without
their, or their families', prior consent. And the practice is perfectly
legal. In a number of U.S. states, medical examiners conducting autopsies
may and do harvest corneas with little or no family notification. (By the
time of autopsy, it is too late to harvest organs such as kidneys.) Few
people know about routine removal statutes and perhaps because of this,
these laws have effectively increased cornea transplants.

Routine removal is perhaps the most extreme response to the devastating
shortage of organs world-wide. That shortage is leading some countries to
try unusual new methods to increase donation. Innovation has occurred in the
U.S. as well, but progress has been slow and not without cost or
controversy.

Organs can be taken from deceased donors only after they have been declared
dead, but where is the line between life and death? Philosophers have been
debating the dividing line between baldness and nonbaldness for over 2,000
years, so there is little hope that the dividing line between life and death
will ever be agreed upon. Indeed, the great paradox of deceased donation is
that we must draw the line between life and death precisely where we cannot
be sure of the answer, because the line must lie where the donor is dead but
the donor's organs are not.

In 1968 the Journal of the American Medical Association published its
criteria for brain death. But reduced crime and better automobile safety
have led to fewer potential brain-dead donors than in the past. Now, greater
attention is being given to donation after cardiac death: no heart beat for
two to five minutes (protocols differ) after the heart stops beating
spontaneously. Both standards are controversial­the surgeon who performed
the first heart transplant from a brain-dead donor in 1968 was threatened
with prosecution, as have been some surgeons using donation after cardiac
death. Despite the controversy, donation after cardiac death more than
tripled between 2002 and 2006, when it accounted for about 8% of all
deceased donors nationwide. In some regions, that figure is up to 20%.

The shortage of organs has increased the use of so-called expanded-criteria
organs, or organs that used to be considered unsuitable for transplant.
Kidneys donated from people over the age of 60 or from people who had
various medical problems are more likely to fail than organs from younger,
healthier donors, but they are now being used under the pressure. At the
University of Maryland's School of Medicine five patients recently received
transplants of kidneys that had cancerous masses. Why would anyone risk
cancer? Head surgeon Dr. Michael Phelan explained, "the ongoing shortage of
organs from deceased donors, and the high risk of dying while waiting for a
transplant, prompted five donors and recipients to push ahead with surgery."
Expanded-criteria organs are a useful response to the shortage, but their
use also means that the shortage is even worse than it appears because as
the waiting list lengthens, the quality of transplants is falling.

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[image: CovJump2] <http:///??.htm>
Georgetown University Hospital/Associated Press

Surgeons at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington perform a kidney
transplant.



*1,154*Americans who died waiting for a liver transplant, January to October
2009

Routine removal has been used for corneas but is unlikely to ever become
standard for kidneys, livers or lungs. Nevertheless more countries are
moving toward presumed consent. Under that standard, everyone is considered
to be a potential organ donor unless they have affirmatively opted out, say,
by signing a non-organ-donor card. Presumed consent is common in Europe and
appears to raise donation rates modestly, especially when combined, as it is
in Spain, with readily available transplant coordinators, trained
organ-procurement specialists, round-the-clock laboratory facilities and
other investments in transplant infrastructure.

The British Medical Association has called for a presumed consent system in
the U.K., and Wales plans to move to such a system this year. India is also
beginning a presumed consent program that will start this year with corneas
and later expand to other organs. Presumed consent has less support in the
U.S. but experiments at the state level would make for a useful test.

Rabbis selling organs in New Jersey? Organ sales from poor Indian, Thai and
Philippine donors? Transplant tourism? It's all part of the growing black
market in transplants. Already, the black market may account for 5% to 10%
of transplants world-wide. If organ sales are voluntary, it's hard to fault
either the buyer or the seller. But as long as the market remains
underground the donors may not receive adequate postoperative care, and that
puts a black mark on all proposals to legalize financial compensation.

Only one country, Iran, has eliminated the shortage of transplant organs­and
only Iran has a working and legal payment system for organ donation. In this
system, organs are not bought and sold at the bazaar. Patients who cannot be
assigned a kidney from a deceased donor and who cannot find a related living
donor may apply to the nonprofit, volunteer-run Dialysis and Transplant
Patients Association (Datpa). Datpa identifies potential donors from a pool
of applicants. Those donors are medically evaluated by transplant
physicians, who have no connection to Datpa, in just the same way as are
uncompensated donors. The government pays donors $1,200 and provides one
year of limited health-insurance coverage. In addition, working through
Datpa, kidney recipients pay donors between $2,300 and $4,500. Charitable
organizations provide remuneration to donors for recipients who cannot
afford to pay, thus demonstrating that Iran has something to teach the world
about charity as well as about markets.

The Iranian system and the black market demonstrate one important fact: The
organ shortage can be solved by paying living donors. The Iranian system
began in 1988 and eliminated the shortage of kidneys by 1999. Writing in the
Journal of Economic Perspectives in 2007, Nobel Laureate economist Gary
Becker and Julio Elias estimated that a payment of $15,000 for living donors
would alleviate the shortage of kidneys in the U.S. Payment could be made by
the federal government to avoid any hint of inequality in kidney allocation.
Moreover, this proposal would save the government money since even with a
significant payment, transplant is cheaper than the dialysis that is now
paid for by Medicare's End Stage Renal Disease program.

In March 2009 Singapore legalized a government plan for paying organ donors.
Although it's not clear yet when this will be implemented, the amounts being
discussed for payment, around $50,000, suggest the possibility of a
significant donor incentive. So far, the U.S. has lagged other countries in
addressing the shortage, but last year, Sen. Arlen Specter circulated a
draft bill that would allow U.S. government entities to test compensation
programs for organ donation. These programs would only offer noncash
compensation such as funeral expenses for deceased donors and health and
life insurance or tax credits for living donors.
[image: [Organ]]  Bloomberg News

Source: Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network

World-wide we will soon harvest more kidneys from living donors than from
deceased donors. In one sense, this is a great success­the body can function
perfectly well with one kidney so with proper care, kidney donation is a
low-risk procedure. In another sense, it's an ugly failure. Why must we
harvest kidneys from the living, when kidneys that could save lives are
routinely being buried and burned? A payment of funeral expenses for the
gift of life or a discount on driver's license fees for those who sign their
organ donor card could increase the supply of organs from deceased donors,
saving lives and also alleviating some of the necessity for living donors.

Two countries, Singapore and Israel, have pioneered nonmonetary incentives
systems for potential organ donors. In Singapore anyone may opt out of its
presumed consent system. However, those who opt out are assigned a lower
priority on the transplant waiting list should they one day need an organ, a
system I have called "no give, no take."

Many people find the idea of paying for organs repugnant but they do accept
the ethical foundation of no give, no take­that those who are willing to
give should be the first to receive. In addition to satisfying ethical
constraints, no give, no take increases the incentive to sign one's organ
donor card thereby reducing the shortage. In the U.S., Lifesharers.org, a
nonprofit network of potential organ donors (for which I am an adviser), is
working to implement a similar system.

In Israel a more flexible version of no give, no take will be phased into
place beginning this year. In the Israeli system, people who sign their
organ donor cards are given points pushing them up the transplant list
should they one day need a transplant. Points will also be given to
transplant candidates whose first-degree relatives have signed their organ
donor cards or whose first-degree relatives were organ donors. In the case
of kidneys, for example, two points (on a 0- to 18-point scale) will be
given if the candidate had three or more years previous to being listed
signed their organ card. One point will be given if a first-degree relative
has signed and 3.5 points if a first-degree relative has previously donated
an organ.

The world-wide shortage of organs is going to get worse before it gets
better, but we do have options. Presumed consent, financial compensation for
living and deceased donors and point systems would all increase the supply
of transplant organs. Too many people have died already but pressure is
mounting for innovation that will save lives.
­Alex Tabarrok is a professor of economics at George Mason University and
director of research for the Independent Institute.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703481004574646233272990474.html#mod=todays_us_weekend_journal

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