THE PHILIPPINES’ ETHICAL TIME BOMB
[What type of person has a kidney to spare for a bit of cash? Poor people. And the Philippines has lots of them. In Basesco, on Manila Bay, about 3,000 of the slum’s 50,000 inhabitants are reported to have sold a kidney.]
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Healthy kidneys are a hot product in the black market. Growing demand and a lack of donors in developed countries have turned developing countries like
After intense international pressure was applied, the government has endorsed a more ethical stand. But there is great scepticism from observers about whether it can keep its high-minded promises.
Here is what happened. On March 3 the Philippine Department of Health issued an administrative order, "Revised National Policy on Kidney Transplantation from Living Non-related Organ Donor and its Implementation Structures". The proposed regulations sounded ethical, but the devil was in the detail. Donors would be allowed to specify a person to receive their organ or they could make a "non-directed" donation.
This was a loophole wide enough to drive a Mack truck through, permitting poor donors to sell their kidneys to unrelated foreigners.
Former health secretary Alberto Romualdez called this an "ethical time bomb." Harvard’s Francis L. Delmonico, of The Transplantation Society, the leading professional body for transplant surgeons, told MercatorNet that it "would have enabled rich foreign patients to use the Filipino as a targeted source of organs". The country’s Catholic bishops denounced it: "Human organ sale or trade, by its very nature is morally unacceptable. It is contrary to the dignity of the human person, his or her authentic autonomy and the essential equality of all persons... [The] body ought not to be treated as a commodity or object of commerce."
Under this barrage, health officials revised the plan. Late last month they closed the loophole and banned all kidney donations to non-related foreigners. Recent reports indicate that legislators are even contemplating on extending the ban to non-related locals.
Will a ban succeed?
But how likely is that awful business of selling kidneys will evaporate overnight? Organ trafficking has sunk deep roots in the
What type of person has a kidney to spare for a bit of cash? Poor people. And the
According to the PNS, these donors are all male, with an average age of
Despite a government-imposed cap which had restricted the number of transplants to foreigners to 10 percent of the total, wealthy foreigners, many from the
Critics are sceptical
That’s why Amihan Abueva of the lobby group Asia Against Child Trafficking fears that the new guidelines will just be ignored, or that brokers will find loopholes. Dr Gene Nisperos, of the Health Alliance for Democracy (HEAD), notes that several administrative orders have been issued without ever being fully implemented. Nisperos told MercatorNet that the government’s privatisation of health care makes him question the seriousness of the virtuous new policy.
The government itself is sceptical. A report for the Philippine Organ Donation Program said last year that the health department was "unable to enforce rules due to the lack of capacity and ability to monitor accredited facilities… The organ donation program of the country has also no mechanism to adequately enforce ethical guidelines on accredited facilities… Compliance to regulations is poorly documented and enforced due to inadequately designed incentive structures, capacity limitations and non-coordination of efforts".
Liberal ideologues
One reason why government officials may not be taking the kidney market seriously is that it actually seems like a good idea to starry-eyed economists. The Economist, for instance, is a consistent supporter of legalising an organ market: "Many people will find the very idea of individuals selling their organs repugnant. Yet an organ market, in body parts of deceased people, already exists. Companies make millions out of it. It seems perverse, then, to exclude individuals. What's more, having a kidney removed is as safe as common elective surgeries and even beauty treatments (it is no more dangerous than liposuction, for example), which sets it apart from other types of living-organ donation."
In an ideal setting, there would be proper medical examinations to determine a donor’s suitability. But in the slums of
In the
Only if there is a resolute political will to enforce the law, will there be no more Domings. Unfortunately few Filipinos believe that a new set of government regulations is going to change anything.
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