• News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

Marketplace

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Listen to the show

Legal kidney sales to fight black market

Operating room tools

The Cato Institute is petitioning for the legal sale of human kidneys as a way to snuff out the kidney black market. Nancy Marshall Genzer reports the ethical issues involved and the recommended selling process.

Operating room tools (iStockPhoto.com)

More on Crime - Law, Health

TEXT OF STORY

Scott Jagow: You've probably heard horror stories about people being kidnapped, and waking up to find one of their kidneys had been removed. The Cato Institute in Washington says there's a way to snuff out the black market for kidneys: legalize the sale of human organs.

Cato makes its case at a forum today. Here's Nancy Marshall Genzer.


Nancy Marshall Genzer: Diabetes is on the rise. The disease eventually destroys kidneys. Waiting lists for scarce kidney transplants are growing.

Cato's Sigrid Fry-Revere says legal kidney sales would solve the problem. Donors can live on just one kidney. Fry-Revere says the selling process would be tightly regulated.

Sigrid Fry-Revere: The government can decide, you need to have informed consent.

But some bioethicists argues that poor donors would be taken advantage of. Instead, they favor a system called presumed consent. After you die, your organs would be harvested automatically, unless you'd specified otherwise.

But Fry-Revere says we shouldn't have to give away a valuable body part that will eventually be sold.

Fry-Revere: And then the companies that transform it into useable, medical material, make a killing.

The President's Council on Bioethics is now studying the ethical issues involved in the organ shortage.

In Washington, I'm Nancy Marshall Genzer for Marketplace.

Music From This Show

  • Big in Japan Alphaville Buy
  • Japan Mambo Tito Puente Buy
  • Organ Donor DJ Shadow Buy
  • Kashmir Led Zeppelin Buy

Marketplace Confessional

"Will makes a great argument. The hostile reception, as indicated by the comments, should be unsurprising. If people actually understood how much immigration has historically benefited us then we wouldn't have the type of protectionist immigration laws we have. If the borders were opened one might see a drop in wages, but considering there would be a correlative drop in prices, it's doubtful there would be an overall harm and most likely considerable benefit..."

The Specials

Conversations from the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Consumer Consequences game

Find out what the world would look like if everyone lived like you. An interactive game from American Public Media.

Play

Marketplace on iTunes U

Marketplace is now available in iTunes U, Apple's online education platform. Get free, downloadable content in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

Sustainability

What is "sustainability?" It boils down to this: Don't eat your seed corn.

Learn more

 ©2008 American Public Media