Editorial

Monday, July 15, 2013

Let Market Forces Solve Organ Transplant Crisis

By Ron Paul
4

Ron Paul

Ten-year old cystic fibrosis patient Sarah Murnaghan captured the nation's attention when federal bureaucrats imposed a de facto death sentence on her by refusing to modify the rules governing organ transplants. The rules in question forbid children under 12 from receiving transplants of adult organs. Even though Sarah's own physician said she was an excellent candidate to receive an adult organ transplant, government officials refused to even consider modifying their rules.

Fortunately, a federal judge intervened so Sarah received the lung transplant. But the welcome decision in this case does not change the need to end government control of organ donations and repeal the federal ban on compensating organ donors.

Supporters of the current system claim that organ donation is too important to be left to the marketplace. But this is nonsensical: if we trust the market to deliver food, shelter and all other necessities, why should we not trust it to deliver healthcare—including organs?

It is also argued that it is "uncompassionate" or "immoral" to allow patients or insurance companies to provide compensation to donors. But one of the reasons the waiting lists for transplants is so long, with many Americans dying before receiving a transplant, is because of a shortage of organs. If organ donors, or their heirs, were compensated for donating, more people would have an incentive to become organ donors.

Those who oppose allowing patients to purchase organs should ask themselves how compassionate it is to allow those people to die on the transplant waiting list who might otherwise have lived if they were able to obtain organs though private contracts.

Some are concerned that if organ donations were supplied via the market instead of through government regulation, those with lower incomes would be effectively denied access to donated organs. This ignores our current two-tier system for allocating organs, as the wealthy can travel overseas for transplants if they cannot receive a transplant in America. Allowing the free market to alleviate the shortage of organs and reduce the costs of medial procedures like transplants would benefit the middle class and the poor, not the wealthy.

The costs of obtaining organs would likely be covered by most health insurance plans, thus reducing the costs directly borne by individual patients. Furthermore, if current federal laws distorting the health care market are repealed, procedures such as transplants would be much more affordable. Expanded access to health savings accounts and flexible savings accounts, combined with generous individual tax deductions and credits, would also make it easier for people to afford health care procedures such as transplants.

There is also some hypocrisy in the argument against allowing market forces in organ transplants. Everyone else involved in organ transplantation procedures, including doctors, nurses and even the hospital janitor, receives compensation. Not even the most extreme proponent of government-provided health care advocates forcing medical professionals to provide care without compensation. Hospitals and other private institutions provide compensation for blood and plasma donations, and men and women are compensated for donations to fertility clinics, so why not allow compensation for organ donation?

Sarah Murnaghan's case shows the fallacy in thinking that a free-market system for organ donations is less moral or less effective than a government-controlled system. It is only the bureaucrats who put adherence to arbitrary rules ahead of the life of a ten-year-old child. It is time for Congress to wake up and see that markets work better in all aspects of health care, including organ donation, just as they work better in providing all other goods and services.

Dr. Ron Paul, a medical doctor and longtime Texas Representative to the US House, continues to promote and educate on issues of liberty through his "Ron Paul's Texas Straight Talk" column, pubished weekly here.





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  Posted by Joelg on 07/16/13 12:15 AM

Once you get rid of "free" or "enforced free" organ transplants, the market will also open to innovative competitive sources: For instance, growing organs from scratch for transplantation or developing artificial organs.

The present system is like freezing things in the Stone Age, leaving life or death decisions under government control. Perhaps the latter is the whole purpose?

Nice article, Dr. Paul

  Posted by jurist on 07/16/13 12:04 AM

I just read an article from the Natural News about a woman who awoke on a table while being prepped to have her organs harvested. She'd been declared dead.

It's time people started looking into the true cause of disease. Organ transplanting is both dangerous and unnecessary. Yet, it is an extremely profitable business with a high propensity for fraud. How many people who are not dead, but have been declared so, have been murdered on the operating table? Who would know, or tell. Certainly not the victim. Who decides who lives or dies, the doctor who has a vested interest in the freshest organ, or the patient who has an interest in living a while longer.

Signing up as an organ donor is tantamount to depositing your organs into a bank, the officers and agents thereof who decide when to exchange them into another body. It is like giving up title, because the organs are attached to a promissory note, and you don't have the decision anymore as to when they are removed. Removal occurs upon declaration of death.

I knew a man who was declared dead no less than five times. Once he awoke in the morgue just before he was to be embalmed. He is now deceased, but from his first declaration of death he lived eight years.

First it starts with a declaration of death. What next, a declaration of low percentage chance of survival?

Doctors have declared me on one occasion with less than a 10% chance of survival as a result of accident trauma. Are they harvesting organs on odds that low? I don't know, because I never lost consciousness so that they could have their way with me. It really pissed them off too, especially when I not only recovered, but also healed so much faster than they'd ever seen before, especially by someone as old as me.

There is way more to this story than is being discussed.

  Posted by mava on 07/15/13 09:54 AM

Sarah Murnaghan's parents should have been less ridiculous ant take to to the East, where she would receive a transplant in no time.

"Supporters of the current system claim that organ donation is too important to be left to the marketplace." Of course. Leave it to the free market and those who pay will get the transplants, what about the communism then?

"Expanded access to health savings accounts and flexible savings accounts, combined with generous individual tax deductions and credits, would also make it easier for people to afford health care procedures such as transplants." There you go, this is how a communist comes out. Health savings accounts and flexible savings accounts? It's simple, - it's called savings account or a mattress! If someone "doesn't have access to health saving accounts", then it means the person simply didn't bother saving, and "needs" to "access" other people's savings! "generous individual tax deductions and credits"? Again, someone else is supposed to pay for this (not get these deductions)?

Looks like a Ron Paul is a closeted commie, after all.

  Posted by mava on 07/15/13 09:43 AM

Why can't we have free market on organ transplants?
Why can't slaves have a free market on their labor?



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