Template Letter in favor of Senator Specter's bill and in

support of pilot projects to reverse America's

organ-donor crisis with financial incentives

Note: Factual links are at the bottom of this page.

After you copy the letter that you see below with your edits as desired, just type your zip code into the box and click on the "go" button. Then, when you get to the Congress.org site, you access an email to the President Obama or your Congressional or state legislator using "Contact via web form" or their given email address and the last option once there is "Compose your own letter." Click on "Next Step" and paste in your letter. You will be given the option to delete text at the bottom if it exceeds their limit. 

Thank you for being an advocate for pilot projects of financial incentives to help save the lives of over 105,000 people waiting for the "Gift of Life"!
 

 

Enter as "Subject": New organ donor policy needed to reverse America's crisis

Then copy and paste from below:

More than 105,000 dying patients are waiting for an organ today. One of them, or one who was taken off the list due to being too sick, dies every hour. Two million-five hundred thousand people die every year in the USA, yet a total of only 12,186 living and deceased persons donated organs last year
. Clearly, "altruism" is failing to meet the demand for organs and failing to end this organ-donor crisis.

We are urging policy makers to begin pilot projects, in various states, of a new model of consent for organ donation: financial incentives.  

"Financial incentives" would proceed as follows: in a government regulated system, living donors and deceased donor families would be offered their choice of the following incentives should they agree to donation: $50,000 cash payment or a decade of medical insurance (Medicare) or a $50,000 tax benefit. In the case of the living donor, all hospital expenses of surgery and follow-up care would be provided and he/she would be reimbursed for lost wages if employed. It should be noted that 45 million Americans are without medical insurance and 79 million have medical bill or medical debt problems.

Can a person "buy" an organ? No. Who pays the $50,000? Insurers. Sixty percent of transplants are kidneys. Each patient taken off of the kidney waiting list saves up to $400,000 for the payers [Medicare (60%) or private insurance companies]. A deceased donor who provides two kidneys would save these payers between $400,000-$800,000.

On 3/31/08 in an article (written on behalf of himself and not the expressed views of any of the organizations he serves) in the Los Angeles Business Journal, Thomas Mone publicly endorsed small scale trial projects to incentivize kidney donation with the government providing health insurance to a living donor. Thomas Mone is CEO of OneLegacy, the largest non-profit organ procurement organization in the USA. He is also President of the Association of Organ Procurement Organizations, and is a Director at UNOS.

Note that when the National Organ Transplant Act (NOTA) was passed in 1984 to prevent payment for organs, our government (i.e. UNOS) had no waiting list and it was not until 1989 that one was started---it reached only 19,095 patients by 12/31 of that year.

It is now time to support Senator Arlen Specter's bill, the Organ Donation Clarification Act of 2008. It would allow states to compensate donors for offering a kidney for transplant and the bill is supported by American Medical Association, the American Society of Transplantation, the Association of Kidney patients, the Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD) Foundation, the Wall Street Journal, FAIR Foundation and Transplant Recipients International Organization.

Financial incentives would not only provide more organs, but they would also reduce the need for split liver transplantation, artificial organs, and xenotransplantation. Some believe Congress will never pass new organ-donor policies. As transplant surgeon, Adela Casas, MD, said, "I think it will be a hard road but a battle worth fighting for."

Please join with us and come out publicly for pilot projects of this new organ-donor policy in your speeches and publications and by voicing your strong support to your peers.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

At the Loma Linda University Medical Center Transplant Institute:
-- Okechukwa Ojogho, M.D., Member, ASTS, Director, Transplantation Institute; Associate Professor of Surgery
-- Pedro Baron, M.D., Member, ASTS, Director of Pediatric and Adult Liver Transplantation; Associate Professor of Surgery
-- Zeid Kayali, MD, MBA, Hepatologist; Medical Director of Liver Transplantation
-- Richard Swabb, M.D., Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Board Certified in Nephrology
-- Jill Weissman, Pharm. D., Transplant Pharmacist, Loma Linda University Medical Center
--
Julia A. Nofrada, RN CCTN (Certified Clinical Transplant Nurse)
-- Leigh Aveling,
DMin., MFT, Chaplain and Associate Professor, School of Religion

At Stanford University School of Medicine:
--
Waldo Concepcion, MD, Member ASTS, FACS; Chief of Clinical Transplantation, Chief of Pediatric Kidney Transplantation, Associate Professor of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine.

At Scripps Green Hospital, La Jolla, CA
-- Donald Hillebrand, M.D., Hepatologist; Medical Director, Liver Transplantation  

 
At the University of South Dakota, Sanford School of Medicine, Sioux Falls, SD:
-- Adela T. Casas-Melley, M.D.,
ASTS, Pediatric/Transplant Surgeon, Sanford Children's Specialty Clinic; Associate Professor-Academic Faculty; Member, Editorial Board, Transplant Chronicles
 
At the Nazih Zuhdi Transplant Institute at INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma:
-- Nicolas Jabbour, M.D., Member, ASTS, Medical
Director

At the Cleveland Clinic:
--John J. Fung, MD, PhD, FACS,
Chairman of the Department of General Surgery and Director of the Transplant Center.
 
At the Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center:
-- Raymond M. Planinsic, MD, Director of Hepatic, Intestinal and Multivisceral Transplantation Anesthesiology

At the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System
-- Thomas Cacciarelli, M.D., Chief, VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System Liver Transplant Surgery Program
 
At the University of California – Davis Medical Center:
-- Lorenzo Rossaro, M.D., Medical Director, Liver Transplant Program, Chief of Gastroenterology and Hepatology

At the University of Southern California Hospital, Los Angeles, CA:
-- Yasir A. Qazi, M.D., Medical Director, Kidney-Pancreas Transplant
-- Kianoush Banaei-Kashani, M.D.,
Keck School of Medicine of USC, Division of Nephrology
-- Jay Vidhun, M.D., Dept. of Nephrology, Kidney Transplant

At the California Pacific Medical Center:
-- Robert G. Gish, MD, Medical Director Liver Transplant Program; Chief: Division of Hepatology and Complex GI; Member of the American Association for the Study of the Liver, the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Society of Transplant Physicians, and the International Liver Transplant Society

At the NYU Medical Center (New York University School of Medicine & Hospitals Center):
-- Lewis Teperman, MD, Associate Professor, Chief and Director of Transplantation Surgery; Member: UNOS Liver & Intestine Committee, Member, Board of Directors: American Liver Foundation, New York Regional Transplant Program and Latino Organization for Liver Awareness

-- Phil Berry, M.D., Advisory Committee for Organ Transplantation (ACOT) appointed by Secretary Tommie Thompson, Health & Human Services, 2001-2004; Past President, Texas Medical Association; President, Texas Medical Assoc. Foundation 

-- Leonard J. Morse, MD; Commissioner of Public Health, Worcester, Massachusetts; Professor of Clinical Medicine and Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Massachusetts Medical School; Chair Emeritus, AMA CEJA; Past-President, Mass. Medical Society

-- Joseph Beezy, MD, Member House of Delegates: California Medical Association, Emergency Physician: Kaiser: Panorama City, CA

--James N. Eustermann M.D. FACS; Board Certified General Surgeon; Diplomat, American Board of Surgery; Fellow, American College of Surgeons; Medical Director

-- Sally Satel, MD, Staff Psychiatrist, Oasis Drug Treatment Clinic, Washington, D.C.; Resident scholar, American Enterprise Institute; Coauthor of One Nation Under Therapy and author of PC, M.D.; editor of When Altruism Isn't Enough: The Case for Compensating Kidney Donors (AEI Press, 2009) and many other publications in favor of new OD policies

-- Diane Furchtgott-Roth, former chief economist, U.S. Department of Labor; senior fellow, Hudson Institute

-- Charles J. Goodacre, DDS, MSD; Dean of the School of Dentistry, Loma Linda University; Past President, American Board of Prosthodontics; Board Member, American College of Prosthodontists; Redlands, CA

-- Richard Darling, DDS; Past National Public Citizen of the Year (NASW); Author: Coma Life, an autobiographical memoir of three liver transplants

-- Dave Courtney, Vice President and Director of Public Relations; The Presumed Consent Foundation

-- Bill Remak, Chairman, California Hepatitis C Task Force;
Secretary, National Association of Hepatitis Task Forces; Member, Board of Directors of the Pharmacy Council on Hepatitis and Liver Disease.
 
-- Ralph H. Treiman, Past-President, American Liver Foundation, Greater Los Angeles Chapter

-- Debbie Delgado Vega, Founder, President and CEO, Latino Organization for Liver Awareness (LOLA)

-- Steve Calandrillo, Professor of Law & Washington Law School Foundation Scholar, University of Washington School of Law, William H. Gates Hall, Seattle, WA

-- Harold Kyriazi, Ph.D., Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA; Founder: AHCSIOS (the Ad Hoc Committee for Solving the Intractable Organ Shortage; website www.ahcsios.org)

-- Alex Tabarrok, Associate Professor of Economics, Deptartment of Economics, George Mason University; Research Director, The Independent Institute; Research Fellow, Mercatus Center

-- more concerned citizens in favor of pilot projects of financial incentives are listed here.

Senator Specter's bill: the ‘‘Organ Donation Clarification and Antitrafficking Act of 2008"

Thomas Mone's article and subsequent discussion with him by Dr. Darling regarding incentivizing living kidney donation with governmental health care insurance may be accessed here.

The policy of governmental and insurer reimbursement to living kidney donors was originally derived by the public announcement/support of this new OD policy by Arthur J. Matas, MD, who is professor of surgery, Director of the Renal Transplant Program at the University of Minnesota and former President of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons. Dr. Matas CV. Dr. Matas informatively answers questions on ABC News.

Donation benefits as proposed by many eminent professionals and citizens, including Mr. Richard DeVos, heart recipient and co-founder of Amway:  http://fairfoundation.org/organdonation/donation_benefits.pdf   

USA organ-donor waiting list http://www.optn.org/. One dies every hour here.

The Lancet is the European counterpart of the American Medical Association's "Journal of the American Medical Association." A 6/8/07 Editorial in the LANCET states, in part,
"“…although ethically and morally suspect, the case for legalising and regulating the commercial sale of human organs may appear to have the upper hand." Full Editorial is here: http://fairfoundation.org/organdonation/LANCET.htm

In regards to the debate over financial incentives, it may be noted that companies such as Genzyme Biosurgery, LifeCell, LifeNet Health and others are expected to have gross revenue of over $200 million dollars by 2012. Their business is providing human cells, tissues and organs for transplant. Full story. Some of UNOS’s organ procurement organizations are also now entering this lucrative business. Is it ethical to allow businesses and OPO’s to profit/receive financial gain from patients' cells, tissues and organs, while patients and their families are not allowed the same benefit?

When the National Organ Transplant Act was passed in 1984 to prevent payment for organs, UNOS had no waiting list and it was not until 1989 that one was started---it reached only 19,095 patients by 12/31 of that year. With close to 100,000 dying souls now waiting, can we morally justify preventing patients and their families from donation benefits while others reap substantial profits from their body organs, tissues and cells?

79 million Americans with medical debt problems, full story. 46 million without health insurance, full story
 


Home | The Facts | $Your Disease$ | Quiz | Newsletter | In The News | Speeches
Join FAIR | FAIR Concept | Coma Life| Donate Please | Links | Contact FAIR | Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2008 The FAIR Foundation. All rights reserved
 Webmaster     
. . .   .
. . . . . . .    . . . . . . . .   . . . .    .   .  . .   .