Nevertheless,
kidneys for transplant remain in tragically short supply. So it is past
time to consider amending the 1984 law that prohibits giving “valuable
consideration” for a kidney for transplant.
This
would have to be done with care, because there are good reasons that
the phrase “payments for kidneys” arouses repugnance. We wouldn’t want
inappropriate donors to be unduly influenced to give up a kidney. (This
is something already considered when screening the thousands of people
who donate one of their kidneys each year without payment.) Another
concern is that we wouldn’t want to live in a world in which only rich
people could get kidneys, by buying them from poor people.
In the United States, we might think about letting individual states
experiment with different regulations. Or we could explore a national
system in which only the federal government could buy kidneys — from
carefully qualified donors, after a significant period devoted to
medical and psychological screening, and having obtained carefully
informed consent. Those kidneys could then be allocated without regard
to patients’ income, much as we presently allocate deceased-donor
kidneys, which are treated as a national resource.
It
would be financially feasible to pay donors quite generously without
requiring recipients to pay anything at all. Donors could be paid
entirely from the savings to the health care system by taking patients
off dialysis.
There
is a long history of thoughtful arguments in favor of allowing kidney
donors to be legally paid or compensated in some way, with carefully
considered precautions. These include a current proposal called the End Kidney Deaths Act, which would establish a limited pilot program for a tax credit to nondirected kidney donors.
To
be clear, we should keep trying for big long-term goals, such as vastly
reducing the incidence of kidney disease by preventing or curing
diabetes, hypertension and other causes. We should keep trying to expand
deceased donation (perhaps by offering funeral benefits in gratitude to
the next of kin who allow it). We should keep exploring cures that
don’t require transplants of human organs. But we can save many lives
now by being more generous to living donors, and it makes sense to start
experimenting with ways to do this legally, ethically and equitably."
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And here's the picture they chose to accompany the op-ed.
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