Age Discrimination in Organ Transplantation?
It looks as if we are beginning to enter an era of age discrimination in health care. As is usually the case in matters such as this, the perniciousness enters on the back of what may be deemed a reasonable thesis: In this case, people who will enjoy transplanted organs longer should have first priority, that is, younger transplant recipients should take priority over older.
This is a difficult matter, to be sure. When a ship is sinking, we used to say women and children first, since it perceived to be the moral duty of men to protect those perceived as weaker. (Today, we would still say protect the children first.) But is this example the same thing as discriminating in favor of the young when it comes to receiving an organ?
The organ shortage puts pressure on the system, sometimes leading to unethical proposed remedies--such as harvesting people diagnosed with persistent vegetative state. Basing one's place in the waiting list on age also seems ethically unsound. The decision should be based on the patient's health, expected efficacy of the organ, and time waiting on the list, it seems to me, not age. (For example, it was wrong to give Mickey Mantle a new liver because he had metestatic cancer.) But it is a matter that needs to be discussed.
The arguments from both sides are well presented in this Chicago Tribune story (printed in the Kansas City Star): "Data released at the Dallas meeting suggest transplant patients in the U.S. would live an extra 11,457 years under the new allocation scheme because more people would receive kidneys that would last longer. 'I think there are advantages to this approach. . . . Now that (this number) is on the table, it's hard for me to go back and say we shouldn't try to achieve this,' said Dr. Mark Stegall, chief of transplantation surgery at the Mayo Clinic.
"Stegall headed the study group that prepared the proposal for the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, which has government authority to oversee transplants.
He emphasized that the proposal hadn't been finalized. Preliminary plans call for several more meetings this year and a public comment period after a formal proposal is issued.
'Many of us feel there have not been enough discussion along the way in the development of this proposal and would like to see a much more robust public debate,' said Dr. J. Richard Thistlethwaite, a transplant surgeon and professor at the University of Chicago. 'People don't understand the implications of what's being suggested.'
"Thistlethwaite said he is uncomfortable with the value judgments he believes are inherent in the proposed system, particularly the emphasis on duration of life over quality of life. 'How can we judge who's more deserving and whose life we value the most?' he asked. 'Where do we draw the line?'"
So, is including age in setting one's place on the waiting list merely triage or unethical diminution of the worth of the lives of older people? Discuss.
HT: Vicki McKenna


3 Comments:
It is a hard call to decide something like this, made all the harder, by our cultures unwillingness to recognise that life does come to an end at some point.
It seems reasonable if there is a shortage of organs to take into account how long the person getting the organ will likely live for. That does seem like a reasonable use of resources.
Yet I agree with your concern about this being the same as telling old people that there lives are worthless and that they should just hurry up and die.
Unfortunately a very reasonable approach to triage on the one hand could quite easily become the evil and horrendous idea of the worthlessness of the eldery on the other without too much difficulty.
Given our cultures obsession with youth I think bad things will happen from doing this. What happened to regarding the old as wise ?
I have to tell this story because I'm not eloquent enough to make the point that it does:
I saw this on televison many years ago. A young man had been killed in an auto accident and his family, still grieving, let the doctors have his heart for a transplant (don't know if they used all his organs or if they just donated his heart). I do know that the recipient of the heart was an older, much older man, and that the parents were chagrined that this old guy should have their young son's heart, like, "Why did we give it up to someone who's not going to live much longer anyway?"
The old man was in a bank one day and someone came in to rob it - forcing everyone down on the floor. I don't recall if it was a group or just one person, but I do remember that the old man, with his new healthy heart, felt compelled to do something, and successfully tackled the man with the gun, and wrested it from him.
So this old man whom the parents thought was a waste of their son's gift saved a bank full of people from a nut-job with a gun.
We shouldn't look at a person's age... people who put their lives to good use and who live in the present, and live fully - those people shouldn't be judged because they're young or old. Anybody can do anything.
Good point. I stand corrected :D
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