Einzige wrote:What a great way to intentionally contort my arguments, Broomstick! Soon enough they'll be as limber as your own intellect, no doubt.
Ah, so you acknowledge I am more mentally more adroit than you? Excellent.
Einzige wrote:Broomstick wrote:
At present, there is no alternative to organ transplant - well, there's dialysis for kidneys, and insulin for diabetics, but neither of those is as good as a working organ.
Not
medical alternatives, you dolt:
accessibility alternatives.
It is medical factors that limit organ transplant - what "accessibility alternatives" will result in more organs? Because without more viable organs there will always be hard choices regarding who gets them.
Let's deal with another little fact: all the money in the world will not make an incompatible liver suddenly compatible with the patient. If there is no organ compatible with a particular patient then it doesn't matter how many
other organs exist for transplant - they're useless to that patient. So even if you were (hypothetically) the wealthiest person in the world there may still be no compatible liver/kidney/whatever available to you.
In other words, money can't change biology.
I know this. That's the crux of my argument: by intentionally limiting the available organs to selected individuals, you will have inadvertently created the motive for the formation of a black market in organs by those excluded from the system. And who will be the ones volunteering their own non-essential organs? The poor.
A lot of organs used in transplants are NOT "non-essential" - like hearts, for example. Most livers are of cadaver origin because of the high risk to the donor in a live liver donation. Good luck getting people to "volunteer" a lung - and in any case, single lung transplants have a low success rates, the preference is lung+heart as the success rates are MUCH better. While technically a pancreas isn't essential to life you only get one, no one will be selling theirs while still alive.
Kidneys are about the only organ where a viable, actual
market for the organ could be created and sustained - everything else, no, all the money in the world isn't going to make significantly more organs avaiable or "accessible" - unless you want to condone killing one person for the benefit of another.
Let's clear up a factual error here - not only can't the poor afford an organ transplant, neither can the middle class. In fact, most of the wealthy of the world can't afford it.
Are you
that fucking stupid? My concern here isn't for the poor or the middle-class -- it's for the elements of society (the addicts, the AIDS-ridden) that you would exclude from the system.
As I said, there are
medical reasos people with HIV are excluded from organ transplants. Addicts are
not permanently excluded.... but they do have to be drug-free for an extended period of time and abstain from recreational drug use ever afterward. Why? Because if they don't they'll kill their new organ and, in many cases, die. That's not being mean, that's dealing with reality.
Other people excluded are those with many types of cancer - because the anti-rejection drugs will allow the cancer to come back and kill them rather quickly. Past a certain age people are not considered for transplant simply because they are not physically capable of tolerating a surgery of that length for
any reason.
All the money in the world will not change these facts.
Second - people with AIDS are turned down for organ transplant NOT because they're homosexual or drug users or "bad people" - they're turned down for medical reasons. Most of the drugs that suppress the HIV virus are damaging to organs, and thus would destroy a donated organ. They also have that fucked up immune system, which will complicate maintaining a transplanted organ. A transplant is unlikely to prolong their lives significantly. Thus, the organs go to someone more likely to live years beyond the transplant.
*sigh*
Once again:
I know this. I'm not arguing that there's some sinister conspiracy afoot to keep them off the donor rolls. What I
am arguing is that, by intentionally excluding them from a more
centralized form of organ donorship - as
Stas Bush and
Duchess argue - you'll give them that much more incentive to look for alternatives to acquiring organs.
There aren't any alternatives.
Do you not understand that by the time someone is on a waiting list for something like a liver they are
already dying? They are terminally ill. They haven't long to live and
every other alternative has already been exhausted
And, again - where do you think the money will come from?
Organ donations
start at hundreds of thousands of dollars just for the operation itself - never mind the testing, the transportation of the organ (which, because speed is required, often utilizes air travel which is inherently more expensive than ground transportation), the time in intensive care, the follow up testing, the medications...
Waving money around will not make these problems go away.
Likewise, and ACTIVE drug user is a poor candidate because of physical self-abuse due to their addiction. A reformed drug user or alcohol CAN be considered for transplant... and can do well IF they stay off their addictive substance of choice. So, if the woman in the OP had gotten clean and stayed clean either she would have kept her first transplanted liver or, if not, would have qualified for a second. What dropped her off the list wasn't being a drug user - obviously, she got a first liver, so that wasn't the final criteria - but that she was still abusing.
I know that.
I know that. Please fucking stop with the cloying POPULIST RAAAAAAAGE!!!!111!, as it doesn't impress me or make your arguments any stronger.
I see - pointing out facts you are uncomfortable with is somehow "populist rage". I don't think that phrase means what you think it does...
My point is that, if it becomes inherent to the system - that drug users are excluded from the rolls - they'll look elsewhere, and that elsewhere might be in struggling slums.
Again - addicts are NOT excluded from the system
as long as their addiction is under control, It is NO different than requiring a former cancer patient to be cancer-free for a certain length of time prior to being considered for a transplant. It's a medcal decision based on whether or not there is an additional medical issue that would impact the likelihood of a successful transplant.
Want another example? People who attempt suicide can be denied a transplant, too - because why would you give a new organ to someone trying kill himself? But it's not a lifetime excusion. IF the underlying mental disorder leading to suicide attempts is under control for a sufficient period of time such a person could, in fact, be given a new organ.
As for the last part of that statement - you think people will be performing actual transplant surgery in a SLUM???
How do you think? Shady surgeons will offer their services to the highest bidder, with specimens selected from the permanent underclasses.
My god - you have NO CLUE how organ transplant is done, do you? It's not something you could do in a gargae with jury-rigged equipment and send the person to recover in a motel room! The surgeries last 12 hours, sometimes more. It requires a surgical TEAM, not just a doc with a razor blade. It requires round the clock high skilled nursing care for days, at least, after the surgery. It requires highly sophisticated testing to check for rejection. It requires a pahrmacy stocked with expensive drugs.
This is not something you can hide in a back alley, you know.
Where will these additional organs for this market come from?
From the poor with nowhere left to turn.
What, you think people are going to willing be butchered so someone else can have their organs, or will you just legalize murder?
As I said - you
might get a market for kidneys, but for other vital organs...? No. India does have a market where poor people are selling their kidneys, but it's leaving an awful lot of human wreckage in its wake through sloppy surgery and lack of follow-up care. Poor Indians are being maimed for life so rich people can buy their kidneys. I find that repulsive. For the rest - you can't have a living heart donor.
How will poor people - who, by definition, have little money - get the cash to pay for these hypothetical organs?
They're not going to
pay for the organs, moron. They're going to be
selling them.
You can't sell your heart while you're still alive. Well, alright, maybe you can - but you're basically butchering one person to save the life of another. Your proposed system is monstrous.