Under the National Organ Transplant Act of 1984, organ suppliers-usually the famillies of critically injured accident victims-are not allowed to receive compensation in exchange for granting permission to remove the organs of their deceased relatives. This organ procurement regime is therefore driven solely by potential donors\u27 altruism. Due to the growing nationwide shortage of transplantable organs, the altruistic system has begun to draw considerable criticism. Focussing on the transplantation of kidneys, this Article challenges the theoretical and economic underpinnings of the altruistic system by comparing it to two alternative policies: a market system that allows demand and supply to equilibrate at a positive price, and a system w...
This article initially demonstrates the falsity of each of these assumptions. Policy alternatives ar...
Organ transplantation is a comprehensive subject covering many different issues: medical, social, po...
All countries throughout the world vary in the way they procure organs, but they all have one thing ...
Following up on proposals by several others,\u27 Blair and Kaserman have thoroughly examined the cur...
In 1984, federal legislation outlawing payment for human organs for transplantation was adopted afte...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...
Over 6,500 individuals died in 2012 waiting for an organ transplant in the United States. In the con...
In 1984, organ donation was formally organized in the United States under the National Transplant Ac...
This article addresses the growing organ shortage in America, analyzes current donation and procurem...
This paper analyzes three issues critical to understanding the chronic shortage of organs. Section 2...
One of the most heavily regulated aspects of the Health Care industry is the organ donation system (...
In the United States, as well as throughout the world, current demands for organ transplants far exc...
From 1989 to 2003 kidney transplant waiting lists have grown 247%. The effect of this growth and adv...
This article will examine the propriety of establishing a system for the sale of human organs, espec...
Altruism and solidarity are concepts that are closely related to organ donation for transplantation....
This article initially demonstrates the falsity of each of these assumptions. Policy alternatives ar...
Organ transplantation is a comprehensive subject covering many different issues: medical, social, po...
All countries throughout the world vary in the way they procure organs, but they all have one thing ...
Following up on proposals by several others,\u27 Blair and Kaserman have thoroughly examined the cur...
In 1984, federal legislation outlawing payment for human organs for transplantation was adopted afte...
For decades, the dominant view among biomedical ethicists, transplantation professionals, and the pu...
Over 6,500 individuals died in 2012 waiting for an organ transplant in the United States. In the con...
In 1984, organ donation was formally organized in the United States under the National Transplant Ac...
This article addresses the growing organ shortage in America, analyzes current donation and procurem...
This paper analyzes three issues critical to understanding the chronic shortage of organs. Section 2...
One of the most heavily regulated aspects of the Health Care industry is the organ donation system (...
In the United States, as well as throughout the world, current demands for organ transplants far exc...
From 1989 to 2003 kidney transplant waiting lists have grown 247%. The effect of this growth and adv...
This article will examine the propriety of establishing a system for the sale of human organs, espec...
Altruism and solidarity are concepts that are closely related to organ donation for transplantation....
This article initially demonstrates the falsity of each of these assumptions. Policy alternatives ar...
Organ transplantation is a comprehensive subject covering many different issues: medical, social, po...
All countries throughout the world vary in the way they procure organs, but they all have one thing ...