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by epmaybe 2431 days ago
I'm not surprised - you probably didn't even look into the living donor programs available in the US.

Many hospitals will cover most if not all of these costs, including your wages, health maintenance, checkups, etc. If the hospital near you won't cover these things, the National Living Donor Assistance Program will help.

> And it remove a source of cash from an entire population, with all that entails

There's something like 100,000 people on the kidney donor list right now (UNOS). Maybe 20,000 of these get a kidney donation per year. It's not really that much of lost productivity, and as we have already explained these costs are usually covered by programs for living donors.

You're acting like this isn't a solved problem, when it is except that people are attached to their own body parts. I for one don't really want to give my kidney away unless I'm already dead. Maybe we should argue for opt-out deceased organ donation programs nationally, instead of this asinine idea that we should allow poor people to sell their kidneys.

1 comments

That 'asinine' comment seemed out of place. 80,000 people die, and the problems with 'poor people having a source of cash' is the bigger issue? I honestly don't understand the emotion surrounding this.

I can sell my life (ok, 8 hours of every day) and no problem.