No Such Thing As Ethical Organ Market
No Such Thing As Ethical Organ Market
No Such Thing As Ethical Organ Market
market
BY: Alastair V. Campbell
The gift of an organ is different from selling it, since the organ is
gifted out of the wish to benefit another person, not for financial
gain.
• Organ trading has negative social effects in that it undercuts the gift
relationship between
donors and recipients. Gift ethic or altruism - with its effect on social
solidarity - is the rationale for many current procurement systems
for cadaveric organs.
If a live organ market is instituted, many people may opt out from
altruistic giving - thus reducing the supply of transplantable organs.
A recent study in Austria has shown that financial incentives would
have this effect.
Demand may also be made for certain forms of payment for
cadaveric organs.
Furthermore, once the ban is lifted, the current organ traffickers will have
the justification they need. It can be argued that a regulated market will
eliminate or reduce the black market.
But so long as the national system still operates on principles of utility and
equity with regard to allocation of organs - if not, perceptions of social
injustice will arise - there will be perceptions of inefficiency for those on the
waiting list.
So in reality, the black market will continue albeit in different forms such
as offering direct higher cash payment to the vendors.
A recent review of the Iranian system in the British Medical Journal clearly
shows that the legislation of an organ market in Iran has not corrected the
problem of the black market and the exploitation of the poor as suppliers.
The article also points out that the waiting list for kidneys in Iran has not
been eliminated.
• It has been argued that the supply of organs will increase with an
organ market, resulting in more lives saved. This is debatable, given
that an organ trade may reduce altruistic donation (of both live and
cadaveric organs) and will attract predominantly the poor who may
provide marginal organs for transplantation.
It has been further argued that people should be allowed to sell their
organs so long as the benefit-risk ratio is favourable. One should however
look at both the short-term and long-term benefit-risk ratio.
In the short term, vendors may not have access to or be able to afford
appropriate care. In the long term, given the increasing incidence of longer
life expectancy and end-stage organ failure, the vendors themselves may
be in need o transplantation.
The Declaration that was issued from the Istanbul summit emphasised the
need for practices that support organ donation from dead donors.
This article was first published in The Straits Times on July 10, 2008.