The headline on Hans Baderâs piece at the Foundation for Economic Education is true as far as it goes: âLifting the Ban on Kidney Sales Would Save 30,000 American Lives Annually.â Bader draws on an earlier essay by Ilya Somin at The Volokh Conspiracy, who in turn riffs on findings published in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.
The TL;DR: âMany Americans die every year because they need kidney transplants, in large part due to federal laws banning organ sales. ... [A]n average of over 30,000 Americans have died each year, because the ban prevented them from getting transplants in time.â
My preferred version of the headline: âThe U.S. government, as a matter of policy, kills 30,000 Americans annually.â
Thatâs 2,500 Americans every month.
And that body count consists only of Americans who die while awaiting kidney transplants.
It doesnât include those who die waiting for hearts, livers or lungs that never arrive because patients â or their insurers â are forbidden to pay live donors, or the survivors of those who die with intact, transplantable organs, for those kidneys, livers and lungs. Adding those deaths would almost certainly push the number above 2,977 every month.
Whatâs special about 2,977? Itâs the number of people killed by terrorist attackers (excluding the attackers themselves) on Sept. 11, 2001.
As you may remember, Americans got pretty exercised about 9/11. Heck, we still DO get pretty exercised about it (for a recent example, note the reaction to Rep. Ilhan Omarâs âsome people did some thingsâ comment).
But every month, month in and month out, year after year, the government kills that many or more with its policies. The public response? Crickets.
The federal ban on paying donors or their survivors for organs is premised in a weird claim that paying donors or survivors for organs would be âunethical.â
Itâs âethicalâ to pay the surgeons. And the nurses. And the anesthesiologists. And the providers of anti-rejection drugs. And, of course, the âmedical ethicistsâ whose opinions underlie the ban.
Only the people who physically provide the indispensable elements of organ transplants, the organs, get empty envelopes come transplant payday.
Whereâs the outrage? The U.S. has been at war for 18 years straight now, with 9/11 as the excuse. But 9/11 every month barely raises eyebrows. The politicians and the âethicistsâ theyâve listened to remain at large. And, yes, they are well-paid.
Scary stories about homeless people with drug problems selling kidneys for crack or being denied transplants for lack of money are just that: Scary stories.
If the purchase of organs was made legal, insurers (presumably including Medicare and Medicaid) would leap at the opportunity to save the money now wasted on expensive care for patients slowly dying as hope fades. A market price would emerge and people with good organs would respond to the incentive â probably mostly in the form of prospective post-mortem donors looking to ease their familiesâ losses.
Of course, there would be a place for ethical considerations in that process. Hopefully better considerations than the currently prevailing ones.