Showing posts with label Transplant tourism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transplant tourism. Show all posts

Friday, November 01, 2013

Tales From The Organ Trade - HBO series starts Nov 4th

This HBO documentary series promises to shed new light on the illegal organ black-market. Transplant Tourism can subject patients to very high risk of poor organ matching, unhealthy donors, poor surgical techniques and post-transplant infections that they seek treatment for when returning home from overseas. Yet patients who have the money and are desperate for a life-saving organ transplant will throw caution to the wind and seek a donor wherever they can find it. And the donors have a high risk of problems also. Almost all kidney donors reported a combination of debilitating symptoms including physical weakness, the inability to perform manual labor, sexual impotency, terror about losing the other kidney, feelings of emptiness, hopelessness and uselessness.

TALES FROM THE ORGAN TRADE explores the controversial practice of black-market organ trafficking: from the street-level brokers who solicit kidney donors, to the rogue surgeons who perform the operations; from the impoverished donors willing to sacrifice a part of their bodies for a quick payday, to the desperate patients who face the agonizing choice of obeying the law or saving their lives. TALES FROM THE ORGAN TRADE debuts as part of the HBO Documentary Films Fall Series on Monday, 
November 4.

poster, stills and a trailer from TALES FROM THE ORGAN TRADE are available to view and/or download here: http://talesfromtheorgantrade.bltoutreach.com/ 


ABOUT TALES FROM THE ORGAN TRADE
This 83-minute documentary explores the legal, moral and ethical issues involved in the complex life-and-death drama or organ trafficking. More than a simple black-and-white story of exploitation, TALES FROM THE ORGAN TRADE is a nuanced and complex film that challenges moral and ethical beliefs. It delves into a world where “villains” often save lives and the medical establishment, helpless to its own rules and bureaucracy, too often watches people die. In the best scenario, victims walk away content and safe, and buyers of organs (the recipients) return home with a new lease on life. From Manila to Istanbul, Colorado to Kosovo, Toronto to Tel Aviv, this film spotlights a compelling cast whom fate has brought together, where the gift of life meets the shadow of death.

Directed by Ric Esther Bienstock (Emmy winner for "Frontline: Sex Slaves"), narrated by David Cronenberg, and produced by Ric Esther Bienstock, Felix Golubev and Simcha Jacobovici, TALES FROM THE ORGAN TRADE debuts MONDAY, Nov. 4 (9:00 p.m. ET/PT).

HBO Documentary Films presents a weekly series this fall, debuting provocative new specials every Monday starting Oct 4 through Dec. 9. Other November films include: “Dial One For Vets” (Nov. 11); “Whoopi Goldberg Presents Moms Mabley” (Nov. 18); and “Toxic Hot Seat” (Nov. 25).

For more information, visit: 
Facebook: facebook.com/hbodocs
Twitter: @HBODocs #TalesFromtheOrganTrade

SOURCE: BLT Communications

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Friday, August 23, 2013

Patient wanted for documentary on transplant tourism

If you or anyone you know has traveled to China to receive an organ transplant as a 'transplant tourist' this request may be of interest. Merv.

"Hi Merv,

I'm doing research for a documentary being shot around the world but originating in the Vancouver (Canada) area. The producer is Leon Lee and the doc's English working title is "Transplanting Hope".  Leon has quite a bit of material shot already but is in need of a Canadian "transplant tourist" to interview.  Preferably they would have traveled to China since the year 2000 and the operation could be either successful or problematic.

The closer to the Vancouver area for this person would be best for our meager budget.  Due to security precautions we don't expect you to forward names to us but if you know of anyone or can post on your blog for someone, they can get in touch with me at this email address."

vfeagle@telus.net

Thanks Merv,

Vince Eagle
604.970.0776



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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Illegal kidney trade booms as new organ is 'sold every hour'
By Denis Campbell and Nicola Davison guardian.co.uk
The illegal trade in kidneys has risen to such a level that an estimated 10,000 black market operations involving purchased human organs now take place annually, or more than one an hour, World Health Organisation experts have revealed.

Evidence collected by a worldwide network of doctors shows that traffickers are defying laws intended to curtail their activities and are cashing in on rising international demand for replacement kidneys driven by the increase in diabetes and other diseases.
Patients, many of whom will go to ChinaIndia or Pakistan for surgery, can pay up to $200,000 (nearly £128,000) for a kidney to gangs who harvest organs from vulnerable, desperate people, sometimes for as little as $5,000.
The vast sums to be made by both traffickers and surgeons have been underlined by the arrest by Israeli police last week of 10 people, including a doctor, suspected of belonging to an international organ trafficking ring and of committing extortion, tax fraud and grievous bodily harm. Other illicit organ trafficking rings have been uncovered in India and Pakistan.
The Guardian contacted an organ broker in China who advertised his services under the slogan, "Donate a kidney, buy the new iPad!" He offered £2,500 for a kidney and said the operation could be performed within 10 days.
The resurgence of trafficking has prompted the WHO to suggest that humanity itself is being undermined by the vast profits involved and the division between poor people who undergo "amputation" for cash and the wealthy sick who sustain the body parts trade.
"The illegal trade worldwide was falling back in about 2006-07 – there was a decrease in 'transplant tourism'," said Luc Noel, a doctor and WHO official who runs a unit monitoring trends in legitimate and underground donations and transplants of human organs. But he added: "The trade may well be increasing again. There have been recent signs that that may well be the case. There is a growing need for transplants and big profits to be made. It's ever growing, it's a constant struggle. The stakes are so big, the profit that can be made so huge, that the temptation is out there."
Lack of law enforcement in some countries, and lack of laws in others, mean that those offering financial incentives to poor people to part with a kidney have it too easy, Noel said.
Kidneys make up 75% of the global illicit trade in organs, Noel estimates. Rising rates of diabetes, high blood pressure and heart problems are causing demand for kidneys to far outstrip supply.
Data from the WHO shows that of the 106,879 solid organs known to have been transplanted in 95 member states in 2010 (legally and illegally), about 73,179 (68.5%) were kidneys. But those 106,879 operations satisfied just 10% of the global need, the WHO said.
The organisation does not know how many cases involved the organ being obtained legitimately from a deceased donor or living donor such as a friend or relative of the recipient.
But Noel believes that one in 10 of those 106,879 organs was probably procured by black marketeers. If so, that would mean that organ gangs profited almost 11,000 times in 2010.
Proof of illegal trafficking is being collected by networks of doctors in various countries known as "custodian groups". The groups work to support the Declaration of Istanbul, the 2008 statement against global organ exploitation that was agreed by almost 100 nations.
Made up of hospital specialists who treat patients with end-stage kidney failure who survive on dialysis, and surgeons who operate on those lucky enough to get a new kidney, the groups monitor reports of black market activity in their own country or involving compatriots abroad.
A medical source with knowledge of the situation said: "While commercial transplantation is now forbidden by law in China, that's difficult to enforce; there's been a resurgence there in the last two or three years.
"Foreigners from the Middle East, Asia and sometimes Europe come and are paying $100,000 to $200,000 for a transplant. Often they are Chinese expats or patients of Chinese descent."
Some of China's army hospitals were believed to be carrying out the transplants, the source added.
The persistence of the trade is embarrassing for China. The health ministry in Beijing has outlawed it and has also promised to stop harvesting organs from executed prisoners by 2017, a practice that has brought international condemnation.
Jim Feehally, a professor of renal medicine at University Hospitals of Leicester NHS trust, said: "Since the Declaration of Istanbul the law on trafficking has been changed in the Philippines – which was one of the centres of transplant tourism – and the Chinese government realises that things have to change." Feehally is also president of the International Society of Nephrology, which represents 10,000 specialist kidney doctors worldwide. "Trafficking is still continuing – it's likely that it is increasing," he said. "We know of countries in Asia, and also in eastern Europe, which provide a market so that people who need a kidney can go there and buy one."
The key issue, Feehally said, was exploitation. "You are exploiting a donor if they are very poor and you are giving them a very small amount of money and no doctor is caring for them afterwards, which is what happens.
"The people who gain are the rich transplant patients who can afford to buy a kidney, the doctors and hospital administrators, and the middlemen, the traffickers. It's absolutely wrong, morally wrong."
Noel wants countries to defeat the traffickers by maximising the supply of organs from deceased and living donors, and encouraging healthy lifestyles to stop people getting conditions such as diabetes in the first place.


“You Have the Power to Donate Life – to become an organ and tissue donor Sign-up today! Tell Your Loved Ones of Your Decision”
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Your generosity can save or enhance the lives of up to fifty people with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants (see allotransplantation). One tissue donor can help by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves
Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ or tissue transplant. Organs can save lives, corneas renew vision, and tissue may help to restore someone's ability to walk, run or move freely without pain. Life Begins with You.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Those seeking black market organs put others at risk

By Pamela Fayerman Vancouver Sun

VANCOUVER — Black market organ transplants put all Canadians at risk, experts say.

The 20 or so desperate Canadians who travel to other countries for the risky procedure each year could contract antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections and bring it back to North America, the researchers say.

With 5,000 delegates attending the 23rd International Congress of The Transplantation Society in Vancouver this week, four experts discussed the many pitfalls of transplant tourism in a panel discussion Monday.

Besides the dire consequences to the health of organ recipients and the public health hazard from new forms of antibiotic-resistant infections, the experts are also concerned about the exploitation of the world's most impoverished people who donate organs to get money.

Dr. Graham Sher, chief executive officer of Canadian Blood Services, said the most recent data he has seen shows that 215 Canadians sought transplants outside Canada from 1995 to 2004.

It is not known how many clandestine transplant operations are being performed in countries including China, India and Pakistan, but medical tourism is believed to be a small industry relative to the 100,000 legitimate transplants performed throughout the world each year.

Yet the consequences of even a small underground industry are grave, experts say.

Dr. Francis Delmonico, a Harvard transplant surgeon and director of medical affairs for The Transplantation Society, said University of Toronto research shows the dire consequences for medical tourists.

The study, led by Dr. Ramesh Prasad, showed that black market kidneys can result in far higher surgical complications, infections, transplant failure and death.

The Prasad study looked at the outcomes of 22 Canadians who travelled to countries throughout Asia and the Middle East for kidneys.

One-third of all the patients who had transplants outside of Canada required immediate hospitalization following their return to Canada, primarily for serious infections.

Another third required eventual hospital admission.

Two patients required repeat transplants and nearly 40 per cent had drug resistant infections.

Another 14 per cent contracted tuberculosis.

In the medical journal Lancet last week, researchers showed that patients from Britain and the United States who underwent medical care in India and Pakistan returned home with gene mutation infections that were resistant to almost all antibiotics.

Earlier this summer, the Centers for Disease Control in the U.S. drew attention to the first cases of such mutations and advised doctors to watch for it in patients who had received care in South Asia.

In order to stem the number of desperate patients seeking organs outside North America, countries around the world have to do more to increase the number of donor organs, experts say.

The first organ transplant was performed in 1954 and since then, transplantation has become such a routine procedure that "we all expect to get an organ if we need one," said Dr. Luc Noel of the World Health Organization which, since 1987, has been helping countries to find ways to crack down on trafficking in human organs.

Delmonico commended Israel for passing legislation which prevents insurance companies there from paying for black market organ transplant procedures.

Canadian doctors have become the first in the world to develop an official policy in which they can refuse to treat patients bent on being medical tourists. Buying and selling livers, kidneys, hearts and other organs is illegal in Canada and throughout the world.

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Your generosity can save up to eight lives with heart, kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas and small intestine transplants (see allotransplantation). One tissue donor can help 75 to 100 other people by donating skin, corneas, bone, tendon, ligaments and heart valves

Has your life been saved by an organ transplant? "Pay it forward" and help spread the word about the need for organ donation - In the U.S. another person is added to the national transplant waiting list every 11 minutes and 18 people die each day waiting for an organ or tissue transplant. Organs can save lives, corneas renew vision, and tissue may help to restore someone's ability to walk, run or move freely without pain. Life Begins with You