The assumption that procuring more organs will save more lives has inspired increasingly forceful calls to increase organ procurement. This project, in contrast, directly questions the premise that more organ transplantation means more lives saved. Its argument begins with the fact that resources are limited and medical procedures have opportunity costs. Because many other lifesaving interventions are more cost-effective than transplantation and compete with transplantation for a limited budget, spending on organ transplantation consumes resources that could have been used to save a greater number of other lives. This argument has not yet been advanced in debates over expanded procurement and could buttress existing concerns about expanded ...
The Ciba Foundation held the first international, interdisciplinary conference on ethical and legal ...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
Organ shortage constitutes an unsolved problem for every country that offers transplantation as a th...
The assumption that procuring more organs will save more lives has inspired increasingly forceful ca...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
The remarkable progress of transplant medicine in the latter half of the twentieth century has led t...
Over the past 15 years, the shortage of organs for transplantation has worsened. This has forced cli...
Following up on proposals by several others,\u27 Blair and Kaserman have thoroughly examined the cur...
The organ shortage is commonly presented as having a clear solution, increase the number of organs d...
O rgan transplants began in 1954 with a kidney transplant performed atBrigham & Women’s hospital...
There are many "opportunities for action" to increase the supply of transplantable organs. The media...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...
The possibility that a market for organs will develop arises as a result of recent scientific succes...
The waiting list for solid organ transplantation in theUnited States now exceeds 92 000 persons (app...
Deceased donor organs are an absolutely scare healthcare resource, meaning demand vastly exceeds a f...
The Ciba Foundation held the first international, interdisciplinary conference on ethical and legal ...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
Organ shortage constitutes an unsolved problem for every country that offers transplantation as a th...
The assumption that procuring more organs will save more lives has inspired increasingly forceful ca...
Organs for transplantation are a scarce resource. Paying to increase the supply of organs is illegal...
The remarkable progress of transplant medicine in the latter half of the twentieth century has led t...
Over the past 15 years, the shortage of organs for transplantation has worsened. This has forced cli...
Following up on proposals by several others,\u27 Blair and Kaserman have thoroughly examined the cur...
The organ shortage is commonly presented as having a clear solution, increase the number of organs d...
O rgan transplants began in 1954 with a kidney transplant performed atBrigham & Women’s hospital...
There are many "opportunities for action" to increase the supply of transplantable organs. The media...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...
The possibility that a market for organs will develop arises as a result of recent scientific succes...
The waiting list for solid organ transplantation in theUnited States now exceeds 92 000 persons (app...
Deceased donor organs are an absolutely scare healthcare resource, meaning demand vastly exceeds a f...
The Ciba Foundation held the first international, interdisciplinary conference on ethical and legal ...
AbstractSince its inauguration in 1954, the field of modern transplantation has made great strides i...
Organ shortage constitutes an unsolved problem for every country that offers transplantation as a th...