At a time when there aren’t enough livers for ailing Americans, wealthy foreigners fly here for transplants.
by Charles Ornstein, ProPublica, and Lee Zurik, Fox 8 WVUE New Orleans
This story was co-published with Fox 8 WVUE New Orleans.
Earlier this fall, a leader of the busiest hospital for organ
transplants in New York state — where livers are particularly scarce —
pleaded for fairer treatment for ailing New Yorkers.
“Patients in equal need of a liver transplant should not have to wait
and suffer differently because of the U.S. state where they reside,” wrote Dr. Herbert Pardes, former chief executive and now executive vice president of the board at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.
But Pardes left out his hospital’s own contribution to the shortage:
From 2013 to 2016, it gave 20 livers to foreign nationals who came to
the United States solely for a transplant — essentially exporting the
organs and removing them from the pool available to New Yorkers.
That represented 5.2 percent of the hospital’s liver transplants during that time, one of the highest ratios in the country.
Little known to the public, or to sick patients and their families,
organs donated domestically are sometimes given to patients flying in
from other countries, who often pay a premium. Some hospitals even seek
out foreign patients in need of a transplant. A Saudi Arabian company,
Ansaq Medical Co., whose stated aim is to “facilitate the procedures and
mechanisms of ‘medical tourism,’” said it signed an agreement with Ochsner Medical Center in New Orleans in 2015.
The practice is legal, and foreign nationals must wait their turn for
an organ in the same way as domestic patients. Transplant centers
justify it on medical and humanitarian grounds. But at a time when
President Donald Trump is espousing an “America First” policy and
seeking to ban visitors and refugees from certain countries, allocating
domestic organs to foreigners may run counter to the national mood.
Click here for the full article.
Source: ProPublica
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