Literature DB >> 24028698

Tragic choices and moral compromise: the ethics of allocating kidneys for transplantation.

Barry Hoffmaster1, Cliff Hooker.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: For almost a decade, the Kidney Transplantation Committee of the United Network for Organ Sharing has been striving to revise its approach to allocating kidneys from deceased donors for transplantation. Two fundamental values, equality and efficiency, are central to distributing this scarce resource. The prevailing approach gives primacy to equality in the temporal form of first-come, first-served, whereas the motivation for a new approach is to redeem efficiency by increasing the length of survival of transplanted kidneys and their recipients. But decision making about a better way of allocating kidneys flounders because it is constrained by the amorphous notion of "balancing" values.
METHODS: This article develops a more fitting, productive approach to resolving the conflict between equality and efficiency by embedding the notion of compromise in the analysis of a tragic choice provided by Guido Calabresi and Philip Bobbitt. For Calabresi and Bobbitt, the goals of public policy with respect to tragic choices are to limit tragedy and to deal with the irreducible minimum of tragedy in the least offensive way. Satisfying the value of efficiency limits tragedy, and satisfying the value of equality deals with the irreducible minimum of tragedy in the least offensive way. But both values cannot be completely satisfied simultaneously. Compromise is occasioned when not all the several obligations that exist in a situation can be met and when neglecting some obligations entirely in order to fulfill others entirely is improper. Compromise is amalgamated with the notion of a tragic choice and then used to assess proposals for revising the allocation of kidneys considered by the Kidney Transplantation Committee.
FINDINGS: Compromise takes two forms in allocating kidneys: it occurs within particular approaches to allocating kidneys because neither equality nor efficiency can be fully satisfied, and it occurs over the course of sequential approaches to allocating kidneys that cycle between preferring equality and efficiency. Ross and colleagues' Equal Opportunity Supplemented by Fair Innings proposal for allocating kidneys best exemplifies the rationality of compromise as a way of achieving the goals of making a tragic choice.
CONCLUSIONS: The attempt to design a policy for allocating kidneys from deceased donors for transplantation by balancing the values of equality and efficiency is misguided and unhelpful. Instead policymaking should both incorporate compromise into discrete approaches to allocating kidneys and extend compromise over sequential approaches to allocating kidneys.
© 2013 Milbank Memorial Fund.

Keywords:  allocation of health resources; compromise; kidney transplantation; tragic choices

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24028698      PMCID: PMC3790524          DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.12025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Milbank Q        ISSN: 0887-378X            Impact factor:   4.911


  4 in total

1.  An alternative kidney allocation algorithm: is it better, and by what yardstick?

Authors:  J S Gill
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2012-08       Impact factor: 8.086

2.  A multifactorial system for equitable selection of cadaver kidney recipients.

Authors:  T E Starzl; T R Hakala; A Tzakis; R Gordon; A Stieber; L Makowka; J Klimoski; H T Bahnson
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1987-06-12       Impact factor: 56.272

3.  Equal Opportunity Supplemented by Fair Innings: equity and efficiency in allocating deceased donor kidneys.

Authors:  L F Ross; W Parker; R M Veatch; S E Gentry; J R Thistlethwaite
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2012-06-15       Impact factor: 8.086

4.  Rational rationing or discrimination: balancing equity and efficiency considerations in kidney allocation.

Authors:  K Ladin; D W Hanto
Journal:  Am J Transplant       Date:  2011-09-11       Impact factor: 8.086

  4 in total
  1 in total

1.  Paramedic experiences of providing care in wales (UK) during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic (PECC-19): a qualitative study using evolved grounded theory.

Authors:  Nigel Rees; Lauren Smythe; Chloe Hogan; Julia Williams
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-06-17       Impact factor: 2.692

  1 in total

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