Headline-grabbing arrests of kidney brokers and renegade doctors
provide glimpses into a global black market in human organs that is
thriving from South America to Asia. The World Health Organization
estimates that 5-10 percent of the 100,000 organs transplanted each year
have been purchased illegally, typically from poor people desperate for
cash. In China, thousands of organs reportedly have been forcibly
removed from prisoners to feed a lucrative "transplant tourism"
business. The full scope of the global organ black market remains
unknown because transplant doctors and hospitals either don't know the
organs were trafficked or are complicit in the deals. Critics say
hospitals should disclose the source of all transplant organs so illegal
sales can be tracked. Some doctors say legalizing government payments
to organ donors -- as Iran has done -- is the only way to eliminate
trafficking, but the mainstream medical community says such payments
would only exploit the poor. Artificial organs eventually could help
satisfy the growing demand for organs, eliminating the black market. CQ Global Researcher Organ Trafficking v.5-14 |
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