Monday, December 07, 2009

EVERYONE can sign up to be an organ donor

Kidneys with cancer tumors are now being transplanted by surgeons in the United States, according to BBC News.

These kidneys keep patients alive while they wait for healthy kidneys. The US surgeons say the technique offers a vital lifeline to patients with end-stage renal failure who could die waiting for a healthy donor organ.
Everyone can sign up to donate their organs when they die. Nobody should think they're too old or too sick to be an organ donor.

If you'd like to donate your organs to other organ donors, please join LifeSharers at http://www.lifesharers.org/. It's free. It could save your life.

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Friday, October 02, 2009

Transplanting kidneys from people who had kidney failure

Kidneys recovered from deceased donors with acute kidney failure appear to work just as well as kidneys transplanted from deceased donors who do not develop kidney problems prior to organ donation, according to a new study by researchers at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center:
"There is a critical shortage of donor organs and we are continually making efforts to expand the donor pool," said Robert J. Stratta, M.D., professor of surgery and director of transplantation at Wake Forest Baptist and senior investigator on the study. "While kidneys from deceased donors with ARF have been considered unusable in the past, our study shows they can work quite well. The function of the new kidney may be slow or delayed - and patients may have to continue dialysis for a week or two until the kidney is up and running - but that's really the only downside. Choosing to utilize these kidneys will greatly shorten the waiting time for people who are willing to accept a kidney from this kind of donor."
Nobody should think they're too sick (or too old) to be an organ donor. People who need transplants would rather live with imperfect organs than die waiting for perfect ones.

As transplant medicine continues to advance, surgeons will continue to transplant lots of organs once thought unusable. Transplanting kidneys from people who suffered acute kidney failure will expand the supply of kidneys by about 1,000 per year. It's a shame Americans continue to bury or cremate 10,000 transplantable kidneys every year.

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Thursday, October 01, 2009

Hospitals honored for high organ donation rates

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today presented awards to 428 of the nation’s hospitals for their success in increasing the number of organs available for transplantation, according to a news release from the Health Resources and Services Administration. These hospitals were awarded the Department’s Medal of Honor for Organ Donation for achieving and sustaining national goals for donation, including a donation rate of 75 percent or more of eligible donors at their facilities

Kudos to all of these hospitals for converting 75% of potential organ donors into actual donors.

The national conversion rate is about 50%, which means that 50% of the organs that could have saved lives were buried or cremated instead.

There is a simple way to reduce this terrible waste -- give donated organs first to people who have agreed to donate their own organs when they die.

Giving organs first to organ donors will convince more people to register as organ donors. It will also make the organ allocation system fairer. People who aren't willing to share the gift of life should go to the back of the waiting list as long as there is a shortage of organs.

Anyone who wants to donate their organs to others who have agreed to donate theirs can join LifeSharers. LifeSharers is a non-profit network of organ donors who agree to offer their organs first to other organ donors when they die. Membership is free at www.lifesharers.org or by calling 1-888-ORGAN88. There is no age limit, parents can enroll their minor children, and no one is excluded due to any pre-existing medical condition. LifeSharers has over 13,000 members, including members in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

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Sunday, September 27, 2009

Opting In vs. Opting Out

Professor Richard Thaler makes the case for an opt-out system of organ donation in today's New York Times. Under an opt-out system, everyone is assumed to be a willing organ donor unless they fill out a government form saying they don't want to donate.

Any opt-out system of organ donation should give organs first to those who don't opt out. Under our current opt-in system, organs should be given first to those who opt in.

About 50% of the organs transplanted in America go to people who haven't agreed to donate their own organs when they die. It's no wonder there is such a large organ shortage.

The United Network for Organ Sharing, which runs the national organ allocation system, has the power to put registered organ donors first. Sadly, it has not chosen to make this common-sense change. Americans who want to donate their organs to other organ donors don't have to wait for UNOS to act. They can join LifeSharers, a national non-profit network of organ donors who agree to offer their organs first to other organ donors when they die. Membership is free at http://www.lifesharers.org/ or by calling 1-888-ORGAN88. There is no age limit, parents can enroll their minor children, and no one is excluded due to any pre-existing medical condition.

Giving organs first to organ donors will convince more people to register as organ donors. It will also make the organ allocation system fairer. People who aren't willing to share the gift of life should go to the back of the waiting list as long as there is a shortage of organs.

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Monday, August 31, 2009

Organ donation is a complex personal decision?

A story in the Dayton Daily News about some of the reasons people don't sign up to be organ donors reports this:

Psychologists and pollsters who have studied the issue say choosing whether to be an organ donor is a complex personal decision.

Is choosing whether to be an organ recipient a complex personal decision? No, it isn't. Just about every single person who is unwilling to be an organ donor would be happy to be the recipient of a donated organ if they needed a transplant to live.

About 50% of the organs transplanted in the United States go to people who haven't agreed to donate their own organs when they die. That's not fair, and it's one of the biggest reasons there is such a large shortage of transplantable organs in the United States.

As a nation, we bury or cremate 20,000 transplantable organs every year. As long as we keep giving organs to non-donors this terrible waste will continue.

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Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Woman gets Army hero's heart through directed donation

Another case of directed donation is in the news. Directed donation is the process that LifeSharers members use to offer their organs to other LifeSharers members. Famous singer Natalie Cole got a kidney transplant through directed donation several weeks ago.

Corporal Benjamin Kopp, an Army Ranger, died recently at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington as the result of wounds sustained in Afghanistan. Corporal Kopp's mother, Jill Stephenson, donated his heart to a family friend. A story in the Washington Post provides more information:

The doctors at Walter Reed raised the possibility of organ donation with Stephenson, but she said there was never much question that it would happen. Kopp had talked about it and indicated his preference both on his driver's license and in his living will with the Rangers. And organ donation wasn't something new for the family.

"I lost a brother 27 years ago. He was only 11, and our family donated his organs," Stephenson said. "And I had that sitting in my heart all these years."

On July 18, Stephenson posted an online journal entry telling family and friends about Kopp's passing and said that they were going to donate his organs.

Maria Burud, Stephenson's first cousin in Chicago, had been following Kopp's condition on the Web site. What occurred next was happenstance.

Burud and Meikle are friends who had worked together in the 1980s. Burud knew that Meikle needed a heart transplant, and Stephenson happened to see her cousin's message in time.

Stephenson had been told that the family could designate an organ recipient if the person was eligible for a transplant. At the time, Stephenson didn't think she knew anyone on the eligibility list.

"It's a pretty unusual coincidence that somebody knows somebody who needs a heart," said Dr. Michael Shapiro, chair of the Organ Transplantation Network/United Network for Organ Sharing ethics committee.

Meikle knew it might not work out, that Kopp's heart might not be a match. "It's a million-to-one shot," she said. It had taken her seven months to get on the eligibility list because she needed to build up a tolerance for heparin, a drug used to prevent blood clots during heart surgery. But she got a call later that day from Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago.

In the early hours of July 20 -- two days after Kopp died -- Meikle had her transplant surgery at Northwestern. She is resting at home in Winnetka, a Chicago suburb.
Directed donation is a wonderful thing. As practiced by LifeSharers members, it is legal under federal law and under the laws of all 50 states.

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Wednesday, August 05, 2009

The economics of LifeSharers

Professor Alex Tabarrok explains the economic theory behind LifeSharers in article in the Library of Economics and Liberty:

"The economics of common resources provides another perspective on the shortage of organs. Resources owned in common tend to be under-supplied and over-utilized. No one wants to pay to restock a lake, for example, when the benefits of restocking flow to everyone regardless of whether or not they helped to pay for the restocking. As a result, open fisheries are almost always driven to depletion. The solution is to close the fishery to those who do not help to restock the lake.

UNOS considers organs to be a "national resource," owned in common. The result, as in other areas, is a tragedy of the commons. Everyone wants to fish in the organ pool but no one has a direct incentive to "restock the lake" by signing their organ donor card. As with fishing lakes, a solution to this problem is to close the organ pool to non-donors.

Consider a no-give, no-take policy for organs. Under this system in order to receive an organ you must have previously signed your organ donor card. Under no-give, no-take, signing your organ donor card can be thought of as joining a club, the club of people who have agreed to share their organs. Or one can think of signing the organ donor card as the price that you pay for organ insurance.

An advantage of the no-give, no take policy is that it satisfies most people's moral intuitions. Many people find the idea of paying for organs distasteful but nevertheless are comfortable with the morality of reciprocity, those who are willing to give should be the first to receive.

A variant of no-give, no-take can be implemented quite easily within the current system by giving those who have previously signed their organ donor cards extra points that would advance them on the queue. In fact, a similar program is already in place. People who have previously been live organ-donors are given extra-points should their one remaining kidney fail them. No-give, no-take simply extends this idea from actual donors to potential donors.

Something like no-give, no-take is currently being implemented privately. LifeSharers.com is an "organ club." Anyone can join. Members agree that if their organs should become available they will go first to a fellow LifeSharers member. (If everyone joins LifeSharers, it becomes equivalent to no-give, no-take.)

Although reciprocity proposals like no-give, no-take have moral advantages it is important to remember that their primary purpose is to increase the incentive to donate and therefore to increase the total number of organs available."

Alexander Tabarrok is the Bartley J. Madden Chair in Economics at the Mercatus Center, George Mason University, and Director of Research, The Independent Institute. He writes regularly at www.MarginalRevolution.com.

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Saturday, July 25, 2009

Everyone can be an organ donor

"It turns out that most people who've had cancer can donate both blood and organs," writes Bob Riter of the Cancer Resource Center of the Finger Lakes in the Ithaca Journal:
I called the United Network for Organ Sharing, the national organization that coordinates organ donations, and learned that they encourage everyone, even sick people, to check that they are organ donors. Upon death, they'll do a variety of tests to be sure the organs are usable. Cancer does not necessarily prevent a person's organs from being used to help someone else. It's the transplant team's job to sort out what they can use and what they can't.
Nobody should think they're too sick, or too old, to donate their organs when they die. If you needed an organ, you'd rather live with an imperfect organ than die waiting for a perfect one.

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Is Steve Jobs a registered organ donor?

"Reports that Apple CEO Steve Jobs traveled to an unidentified hospital in Tennessee for a liver transplant this March have sparked a debate over whether the wealthy are able to use their resources to game the national organ donation system," according to an ABC News story.

Did Steve Jobs jump the waiting list? Is it fair that Steve Jobs was on the waiting list at multiple transplant centers? Should multiple listing be allowed? These are the questions being asked.

Here is the question nobody is asking: Is Steve Jobs a registered organ donor? If he wasn't willing to donate his organs after his death, then he got an organ that should have been given to a registered organ donor.

If you'd like to donate your organs to other organ donors, please join LifeSharers at www.lifesharers.org. Membership is free.

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Saturday, June 20, 2009

UNOS says deceased directed donation is legal

A few weeks ago, singer Natalie Cole received a kidney transplant through directed donation. The family of a deceased donor asked that her kidney be offered to Ms. Cole. The kidney turned out to be a good match for her, and the transplant was performed.

The United Network for Organ Sharing, which runs the national organ allocation system, decided to clarify the status of directed donation after Ms. Cole's transplant sparked a lot of public questions. Here is an excerpt from UNOS' news release:

Directed donation is a request made by a donor or donor family to transplant a specific recipient. This practice is legally authorized by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA) and by most state anatomical gift laws, which use the UAGA as a guide. (A few state laws are silent on directed donation but do not specifically disallow the practice.)

The policy of the national Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN), operated by United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) under federal contract, recognizes directed donation as long as the agencies involved take steps to verify the medical suitability of the organ offer for the specified recipient. The Federal regulation that guides the OPTN (the OPTN Final Rule) expressly allows directed donation to a named individual.

In recent years, at least 100 deceased donor transplants each year have occurred through directed donation. Such requests occur most frequently when the donor or donor family either are related to the recipient or know the recipient personally. Past instances of directed donation that have resulted in media coverage include a daughter-to-father heart transplant and a heart transplant from a church member to the church's pastor. In many instances, only one organ from a deceased donor is directed to a specific recipient; other organs from the donor are allocated according to OPTN policy.

Directed donation is the process that LifeSharers members use to offer their organs to other LifeSharers members. Our donation process is carefully designed to comply with federal and state laws.

Some people say LifeSharers members donate their organs to a group (which is not allowed), not to a specific recipient. These people are misinformed. The LifeSharers donation agreement reads, in part: "For each organ of my body donated, I designate as donee that LifeSharers member who is the most suitable match as defined by the criteria in use by LifeSharers at the time of my death." When organs from a LifeSharers member become available, we rely on the member's next-of-kin to call LifeSharers at 1-888-ORGAN88, get the names of members who need those organs, and direct the donation of those organs to these specific recipients.

There have been suggestions that transplant personnel might not cooperate with this process. This is highly unlikely. In fact, it is specifically their job to cooperate, as UNOS' news release explains:
The role of transplant professionals is to ensure that any donor offer is handled properly and that the safety and interests of the donor and donor family are protected. This is true in the rare instance of directed donation as well as the commonplace, non-directed allocation of organs to transplant candidates.
It's hard to imagine that transplant professionals, who are all highly trained to do everything they can to facilitate organ donations, would not help make sure that legal directed donations take place.

Please join LifeSharers if you want to donate your organs to other organ donors.

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Steve Jobs' transplant highlights organ allocation unfairness

"Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs's decision to travel to Tennessee for a liver highlights the significant disparities in transplant waiting times across the country -- the source of a longstanding controversy over the fairest way to distribute scarce organs," according to a story by Laura Meckler in the Wall Street Journal. The waiting time for a liver transplant in Tennessee is much shorter than it is elsewhere.

Disparities in waiting times are not the only unfair aspect of organ allocation in the United States. Under the rules written by the United Network for Organ Sharing, people who haven't agreed to donate their own organs when they die get treated the same as registered organ donors. It's not fair to give organs to non-donors as long as there are registered organ donors who need them.

If UNOS gave organs first to organ donors it would create an incentive for non-donors to donate. More organ donors means fewer people dying waiting for organ transplants.

In the face of UNOS inaction on this, LifeSharers has created a way for Americans to donate their organs to other organ donors. We use directed donation, which is the process that got Natalie Cole her kidney a few weeks ago. Directed donation is legal under federal law and under the laws of all 50 states.

Anyone who wants to donate their organs to other organ donors can join LifeSharers at www.lifesharers.org.

And by the way, many people think organs are allocated first to the people who need them most, but that's now how the system works. Instead, geography plays a big role, as Ms. Meckler explains:

The current system relies heavily on illness and geography, with the chances of getting a donated liver much better for those waiting in the same local area as the donor. In many cases, priority is given to those who sign up locally, even if there are sicker patients waiting in the next city or next region.

Keep this in mind the next time you hear someone criticize LifeSharers because our system doesn't give organs to the people who need them the most.

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Friday, June 19, 2009

More old people dying waiting for transplants

Nearly half of kidney transplant waiting list patients over age 60 are at risk of dying before they receive a deceased-donor organ, according to a paper published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

A MedPage Today story says the paper's authors projected that 46% of older patients placed on the waiting list in 2006-07 would die before receiving a deceased-donor transplant, up from a projected 22% in 1995.

The waiting time for a deceased-donor transplant rose significantly from 1995 to 2007, as demand for transplantable organs grew faster than supply.

Things may get even worse for older patients who need transplants. The United Network for organ sharing is studying a proposed policy for organ allocation that would give younger patients more rapid access to deceased-donor transplants at the expense of older patients.

Meanwhile, half of the organs that could be donated are buried or cremated instead. A big reason for this is that UNOS allocation policies allow people who haven't agreed to donate their organs when they die to remain eligible to receive organs if they need one to live. If UNOS allocated organs first to registered organ donors, more people would donate their organs and fewer people would die waiting for transplants.

If you'd like to donate your organs to other registered organ donors, please join LifeSharers at www.lifesharers.org.

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Sunday, May 24, 2009

Law should require people who need transplants to be organ donors, says OPO exec

Susan Stuart, President and CEO of the Center for Organ Recovery & Education, has expressed support for one of the ideas behind LifeSharers. Ms. Stuart's organization is the federally designated organ procurement organization for parts of western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and New York. LifeSharers is a national organ donation network. LifeSharers promotes the concept that everyone who is willing to receive an organ transplant should be willing to be an organ donor.

Here is an excerpt from a story in today's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
"If [the United Network for Organ Sharing] allocated organs first to registered organ donors, more people would donate and thousands of lives would be saved every year," David Undis, LifeSharers executive director, said last year.

The concept gets support from CORE's Ms. Stuart.

"I think there should be legislation that if you are put on the waiting list for an organ, you have to be a donor yourself. It's very discouraging when we have a transplant recipient and they die and we approach the family about donations and they say no."

Ms. Stuart's statement is refreshing. Some OPO executives seem to view LifeSharers as a competitor, but our view is that LifeSharers and the OPOs are all on the same team. We're all trying to increase the number of organ donors.

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Directed donation works for Natalie Cole

Natalie Cole, the famous singer, has received a kidney transplant through directed donation. This is the process that LifeSharers members use to give their organs to other LifeSharers members.

Here are some details from a news release issued by OneLegacy:
OneLegacy, the non-profit, federally designated organ and tissue recovery organization serving the seven-county greater Los Angeles area as part of the national organ transplantation network, facilitated the transplant of a kidney to Natalie Cole via a directed donation from a deceased donor.

"As stewards of the organ donation process, OneLegacy collaborates with area hospitals to support families facing the loss of a loved one," said Tom Mone, OneLegacy CEO and Executive Vice President. "One such family generously agreed to donate organs to people in need of a life-saving transplant. Having heard of Ms. Cole's need for a kidney, the family asked that one of their loved one's kidneys be transplanted to Ms. Cole if they were a match."

In accordance with the family's request, OneLegacy donation coordinators then determined through tests that the kidney would be a biological match for Ms. Cole and coordinated the recovery process.

Directed donation is a specific request made by a donor or donor family to direct a recovered organ to a specific transplant recipient. While rare, this practice is recognized by the California Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (UAGA) and occurs most frequently when the donor or donor family are related to the recipient or know the recipient personally.

In a 2006 story on CNN, a OneLegacy representative criticized LifeSharers' use of directed donation, saying "any time you work outside of the established allocation process, you're not necessarily giving the organs to people that are most in need." Now in 2009, OneLegacy's CEO praises the generosity of the family that used directed donation to help Natalie Cole. Was Natalie Cole the person most in need? No, but it was the donor family's legal right to give her their loved one's kidney.

What does the Natalie Cole case prove? It proves that directed donation is legal. It's legal whether organ procurement organizations like it or not, and it's legal whether the recipient is a celebrity or not. Directed donation as practiced by LifeSharers members is legal under federal law and under the laws of all 50 states.

If you'd like to donate your organs to other organ donors, please join LifeSharers at www.lifesharers.org.

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Friday, May 01, 2009

Transplant statistics all bad news

The number of deceased organ donors in the United States went down in 2008. So did the number of live organ donors. According to an article on NephrOnline, this is the first time this has happened since UNOS started tracking donor statistics 20 years ago.

According to UNOS data, the number of transplants in the United States also went down in 2008. What went up? The number of people waiting for transplants, and the number of people added to the transplant waiting list. The transplant waiting list hit 100,000 for the first time in 2008. About 50,000 more people will join the list in 2009.

Is there any good news? According to the NephrOnline article, "UNOS also noted that the reported deaths on the transplant waiting list have decreased each year nationwide since hitting a peak of 6,926 in 2004. The current data shows there were 6,229 reported deaths in 2008."



With fewer donors, fewer transplants, and more people waiting can it really be that fewer people are dying? As it turns out, the answer is no. This statistic only measures people who were removed from the waiting list because they died. There's another important category: people who were removed from the waiting list before they died. These people are removed from the list because while they were waiting they became too sick to undergo transplant surgery. This number has been going up.



These people usually die shortly after being removed from the waiting list. If you add these people to the people who died while still on the waiting list, you get a better picture of annual deaths from the organ shortage. Annual deaths continue to increase.



More than half of the people on the waiting list will die before they get a transplant, and the organ shortage keeps getting worse every year. LifeSharers has published a proposal that will turn things around: UNOS should establish two waiting lists. UNOS should have an 'A' list for registered organ donors and a 'B' list for non-donors. UNOS should allocate an organ to someone on the 'B' list only if it isn't needed by anyone on the 'A' list.

More people would donate their organs if refusing to donate would put them on the 'B' list. If UNOS adopted the LifeSharers proposal, thousands of lives would be saved every year.

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Who is punishing who?

A story aired on ABC TV in our nation's capitol says:

Professionals in the medical community are discussing a controversial proposal that would change the way people are placed on the national organ donor waiting list.

An organ donor network called LifeSharers wants the list to give preference to patients who signed up to be organ donors before they became sick.

According to the story:
The United Network for Organ Sharing, the non-profit organization that maintains the national waiting list, does not agree with the proposal. They believe it punishes transplant candidates who haven't made the personal decision to donate themselves.
Who is punishing who here? If I "haven't made the personal decision to donate", I have made the personal decision to bury or cremate organs that could save several lives. I have made the personal decision to punish my neighbors.

On the other hand, giving a preference to patients who signed up to be organ donors before they became sick will increase the number of organ donors. This helps everyone, even non-donors.

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Rewarding donors will produce more donors

LifeSharers released a proposal last year calling for the United Nework for Organ Sharing to create two transplant waiting lists in the United States -- the 'A' list for registered organ donors, and the 'B' list for everybody.

Under this proposal, all organs would be allocated to people on the 'A' list, with non-donors on the 'B' list only getting organs not needed by registered organ donors. If UNOS did this, just about everyone would register as an organ donor. Very few people would refuse to donate if refusing meant they'd probably never get an organ transplant if they ever needed one.

USA Today published a story about some reactions to this proposal, including this:

Mark Fox, associate director of the Oklahoma Bioethics Center at the University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, says fixes such as the LifeSharers plan have "inherent logic" to them.

Perhaps prior willingness to donate could factor in as a "tiebreaker" in awarding organs, but he says there is no evidence such a plan would increase donation.

Since the LifeSharers plan hasn't been implemented, there is of course no "evidence" that it would increase donations. But there is every reason to think it would do exactly that. It's basic human nature. When you reward a behavior, you get more of it.

More from Dr. Fox:
"We are an age- and death-defying society," he says. Most people do not sign up to donate because they do not think about their own medical frailties, he says.
The LifeSharers plan gives people a good reason to think about their medical frailties. If you think about the possibility you might someday need a transplant, and if you know you probably wouldn't get one if you didn't sign up to be a donor, you will probably sign up to donate.

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Rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the Kidney Transplantation Committee of the United Network for Organ Sharing is considering changing the way kidneys from deceased donors are distributed:

The committee discussed three concepts that could be used in a new system to determine who gets kidneys:

— A formula that determines how long a patient can expect to live after receiving a new kidney.

— The amount of time a patient has been receiving dialysis treatments.

— A measure of the quality of the donated organ in relation to the candidate's age and health.


This is like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. None of these changes will do anything to increase the supply of kidneys.

UNOS continues to treat organ allocation as a zero-sum game. It doesn't have to be that way. UNOS can increase the supply of organs by allocating donated organs first to people who have agreed to donate their own organs when they die.

If UNOS did this, just about everyone would sign up to be an organ donor. It would also make the organ allocation system fairer. People who aren't willing to share the gift of life should go to the back of the transplant waiting list.

America doesn't have an organ shortage. We have an organ donor shortage. Americans bury or cremate 20,000 transplantable organs every year. About 8,000 Americans die every year waiting for organ transplants. UNOS should do the math.

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