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(Image by Flickr user Artur Bergman (cc: by-nc-sa))
There's a worldwide shortage of organs for transplants, and some
countries are offering controversial incentives to increase donations.
Join an online discussion about organ donation at "The World"
Science Forum.
This story is adapted from a broadcast audio segment; use audio player to
listen to story in its entirety.
Story by Marco Werman
and Aaron Schacter, PRI's "The World"
Organ transplants have become a routine part of modern medicine. But
transplants also produce a global dilemma: Far more people need new hearts,
lungs and kidneys than can get them.
There's a worldwide shortage of organs. In the
To tackle the organ shortage, some countries are experimenting with various
strategies.
Jacob Lavie, a transplant surgeon at the
But some Israelis fear the new law will hurt them.
"I'm Orthodox, I cannot give," said Rabbi Yaakov Weiner, who heads
the
While Rabbi Weiner won't sign an organ donor card, he is willing to accept an
organ. He says if a patient has already been taken off life support, and has
already been killed, why not use those organs to save
a life.
"To us, the ethics of medicine is not discrimination," said Weiner.
"Whoever needs it the most, they're the ones who get it."
Robbie Berman heads the Halachic Organ Donor Society, which encourages Jews to
donate organs. He says people who are unwilling to sign donor cards, but are
willing to take organs are hypocrites, regardless of their reasons.
"There are many Orthodox rabbis that support organ donation," said
Berman. "These people have chosen to be part of a religious group that tend to reject it. Fine, that's their right to reject it,
but don't then come and claim that you want to get benefits from
it."
The Israeli law contains another incentive to boost donation: The state is
allowed to pay families up to $13,000 dollars for donating a loved-one's
organs.
Dr. Mustafa Al-Mousawi is a transplant surgeon and
former president of the Middle East Society for Organ Transplantation. He's
been following the Iranian system and argues that, while it may have reduced
the organ shortage, it is unfair to the donors, who are often poor and
underprivileged.
He also thinks the organ shortage should be addressed by increasing organ
donations from deceased donors, not living ones. And he is against paying
donors for organs.
Dr. Mustafa Al-Mousawi is online all this
week at "The World" Science Forum, and is available to take your
questions and comments. Join the discussion with
Dr. Al-Mousawi.
PRI's "The World" is a one-hour, weekday radio news magazine
offering a mix of news, features, interviews, and music from around the globe. "The
World" is a co-production of the BBC World Service, PRI and WGBH Boston. More "The World."