People with liver failure and cirrhosis die every year
because there are not enough livers available.
Who should receive the treasured life-saving organ? There is an organ allocation system in place,
which has evolved over time, which ranks patients who need liver
transplants. Without such a system,
there would be confusion and chaos. How
can we fairly determine who should receive the next available liver? What criteria should move a candidate toward
the head of the line? Age? Medical diagnoses? Insurance coverage?
Employment status? Worth to
society? Criminal record?
An artist's rendering of the liver from the 19th century.
Consider the following 6 hypothetical examples of patients
who need a liver transplant to survive.
How would you rank them? Would
those toward the bottom of your list agree with your determination?
- A 50-yr-old unemployed poet is an alcoholic. He has been sober for 1 year. His physicians believe he will not survive another year without a transplant.
- A 62-yr-old prisoner has end stage liver disease from hepatitis C, contracted from prior intravenous drug use. He has been showing serious medical deterioration and his physician is concerned that his demise approaches unless he undergoes a liver transplant. He will be incarcerated for life. He is taking college classes pursuing an undergraduate degree.
- A 45-yr-old piano teacher has a malignant liver lesion. Her physicians have advised a liver transplant. Although the survival rate for a liver cancer transplant is reasonable, it is lower than for sober alcoholics or hepatitis C. There are no other effective treatments available. Her prognosis with standard medical treatment is dismal.
- A 40-yr-old has end stage liver disease of unclear cause. Liver transplant would likely save his life. He is self-employed and has no medical insurance.
- A 60-yr-old hedge fund operator needs a new liver to survive. He is concerned that according to medical criteria, he will not be given a liver soon enough. In exchange for a liver, he offers to donate $5 million to the medical institution to fund cutting edge research in treating liver disease. This research has the potential improve the lives of thousands of individuals.
- A 55-yr-old is trying to get a liver transplant for his child. In exchange for preferential treatment, he will stipulate that several family members will agree to donate various organs upon death.
A conflict of interest understandably taints our views. For example, we may be against paying ransom for kidnapped hostages, until our kid is taken hostage.
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ReplyDeleteThe 40 year old or 42 year old
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