Literature DB >> 23001920

A legal market in organs: the problem of exploitation.

Kate Greasley.   

Abstract

The article considers the objection to a commercial market in living donor organs for transplantation on the ground that such a market would be exploitative of the vendors. It examines a key challenge to that objection, to the effect that denying poor people the option to sell an organ is to withhold from them the best that a bad situation has to offer. The article casts serious doubt on this attempt at justifying an organ market, and its philosophical underpinning. Drawing, in part, from the catalogued consequences of a thriving kidney market in some parts of India, it is argued that the justification relies on conditions which are extremely unlikely to obtain, even in a regulated donor market: that organ selling meaningfully improves the material situation of the organ vendor. Far from being axiomatic, both logic and the extant empirical evidence point towards the unlikelihood of such an upshot. Finally, the article considers a few conventional counter-arguments in favour of a permissive stance on organ sales.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Allocation of Organs/Tissues; Kidneys; Paternalism; Public Policy; Social Aspects

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23001920     DOI: 10.1136/medethics-2012-100770

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Ethics        ISSN: 0306-6800            Impact factor:   2.903


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4.  Would government compensation of living kidney donors exploit the poor? An empirical analysis.

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  5 in total

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