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Sparking debate on selling body organs
Friday, 29 June 2012, 11:36 am
Press Release: University of Auckland
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Sparking debate on selling body organs
Failing to
legalise the trade of body organs is fuelling a global black
market and killing sick and vulnerable Kiwis.
That’s
the view of UC master’s student Rachel Walsh, who is
arguing to legalise the trade of body organs in her
60,000-word law thesis. In researching the topic she has
discovered a flourishing black market in body organs where
it is possible to go online and – within an hour – buy a
kidney from India for $20,000.
She uncovered stories
of poor and unsafe medical procedures related to organ
extraction, as well as stories of people being exploited,
kidnapped and attacked for their organs.
“It is
important to realise that just because we may find the trade
of body organs immoral or culturally offensive, doesn’t
mean it’s not happening. The truth is that it is
happening.
“In fact, I argue that people are more
vulnerable and the system more prone to exploitation without
legal regulation.
“In my mind it’s time to wake up
to this fact. It’s time we legalised the trade of body
organs in New Zealand and around the world – and by doing
so, made it safer for people to give and receive organs,”
Ms Walsh says.
She says more and more New Zealanders
rely on the donation of body organs, particularly kidneys,
with the rapid rise of diseases such as diabetes.
Yet
data shows New Zealanders are usually forced to wait
indefinitely to receive an organ because Kiwis are some of
the least likely people in the world to donate them.
The high demand and poor supply of body organs puts
people’s lives at risk and causes them to look outside the
health system to the black market for answers, says Ms
Walsh.
A raft of legal changes could give New Zealand
a ready supply of affordable body organs that have been
harvested ethically and safely. Such changes could also mean
people would get them in a timely way.
Ms Walsh says
the law could regulate the buying and selling of organs
through price setting or incentivising organ donation
through tax breaks and paid state funerals.
ends
© Scoop Media

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