Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Elaine Perlman's avatar

Thank you for raising these concerns. The End Kidney Deaths Act does not create a market for organs. Coercion and organ sales would remain illegal and strictly enforced.

Kidney donation is not easy. It is time-consuming, painful, and stressful. It involves around 6 months of testing, major surgery, and recovery. It is morally right to compensate people for difficult, meaningful work.

Importantly, only about 2 percent of those who come forward to donate actually go through with it. Most are medically disqualified after undergoing rigorous physical and mental exams. That means there will be no flood of vulnerable people donating just for the money. The process is and will remain careful, thorough, and safe.

We already pay people to do risky, lifesaving work. We offer tax breaks to encourage adoption and renewable energy. These are incentives for choices we value as a society. A tax credit for those brave and compassionate enough to have a major surgery to save the life of someone they don't know is no different.

Around 100,000 people are waiting for a kidney. Half will die before one becomes available until the End Kidney Deaths Act passes. The current system favors those with means. A better system protects donors, respects their courage, and gives more people the freedom to help.

Expand full comment
Blanca's avatar

It just doesn’t make sense that everyone in the transplant process gets paid except the actual donor. The person who’s going through surgery, recovery, time off work, and a lifetime of follow-up appointments gets...a pat on the back? That’s not dignity. That’s neglect.

Offering $50K over five years isn’t “buying” a kidney. It’s saying: we see what you did, and we value it. Stretching it out over time also makes it clear this isn’t about quick cash grabs,it’s a real thank-you that helps offset the cost of doing something incredibly selfless.

Also, the money we’re already spending on dialysis is wild. Over $80K a year per person, and we’re doing that for hundreds of thousands of people. If paying donors can help even a fraction of those folks get a transplant instead, that’s a win for them and for taxpayers.

I don’t get why it took this long. We already pay people for plasma, for bone marrow, even for being in clinical trials. But giving someone a kidney to save their life? Still treated like a moral taboo. This law is long overdue.

Expand full comment
2 more comments...

No posts