There are innovative approaches to global health care. Here is one, that involves reusing pacemakers recovered from deceased donors and refurbished for use in countries where pacemakers are too expensive for wide use. Unlike some of what we encounter in kidney transplants across borders, the legal bans that have to be overcome may not come from the war against the poor. A careful clinical trial is underway. There is also an unregulated black market...
Here's the encouraging story from Helio.com:
After death, a new life for refurbished pacemakers in low-, middle-income countries, February 23, 2024
"Lack of access to pacemakers is a major challenge to the provision of CV health care in low- and middle-income countries; however, postmortem pacemaker utilization could offer an opportunity to deliver this needed care, according to Thomas Crawford, MD, an electrophysiologist and associate professor of internal medicine at University of Michigan Health and the medical director of My Heart Your Heart, a cardiac pacemaker reuse initiative at the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center
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"Crawford: The need is great. Each year, somewhere between 1 million and 2 million people worldwide die due to a lack of access to pacemakers and defibrillators. There is literature reflecting this. When you query pacemaker implantation data for the United States, it is roughly 800 pacemakers per 1 million population. When you query countries like, for example, Nigeria, it says four pacemakers per million. Quite a difference.
"Per capita gross domestic product is such that, in many countries, a pacemaker costs more than a person’s annual income.
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"Healio: What are the regulations around using a refurbished pacemaker?
"Crawford: Pacemaker reuse is illegal in all jurisdictions. The FDA states that pacemaker reuse is an “objectionable practice.” We know we can do it, but we need to develop partnerships with other entities to give us credibility. One of those methods to do this is by engaging the government. FDA issues export permits for this type of activity. We created a protocol where we reprocess the device, working with Northeast Scientific, which provides the pacemaker cleaning and sterilization. We have received permission from the FDA to export them. We have to put a sticker on them saying “not for use in the United States.” We are doing this in countries in which governments will allow it. One of the limitations is needing a government letter from each of the recipient countries. We have about 12 countries now, and the collection of countries we are working with is purely accidental. It is not a normal methodological process. A lot of it is through contact with individuals and opportunities that arise.
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