Hospital's Organ Program Is Unique
BY: Jay Lindsay
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The program, called Hope Through Sharing, could ease the critical shortage of donor organs, doctors say. Also, it will allow willing donors who do not have compatible organs to help loved ones anyway. So far, the program involves only kidneys.
The program has raised ethical questions because federal law prohibits buying or selling organs. But Dr. Richard Rohrer, the hospital's chief of transplant surgery, said the only benefit the donor receives for the kidney is another kidney for his or her loved one.
"It is assigning a value to a kidney donation, and the value is exactly a kidney," he said. "On that basis we feel very comfortable."
Dr. Mark D. Fox, medical ethicist at University of Rochester Medical Center, said while the program gives an advantage to people on the waiting list who know willing donors, everyone benefits in the end.
"It's really a good-faith donation," said Fox, who served on the UNOS panel that evaluated the program.
Of the 75,000 people waiting for an organ transplant nationally, about 48,000 need a kidney. The average wait nationally is five years; it is three to four years in Massachusetts.
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