Nursing Ethics
Volume 23, Issue 7, 2016, Pages 754-760

Transplant tourism and organ trafficking: Ethical implications for the nursing profession (Article)

Corfee F.A.R.*
  • a Australian Catholic University, Australia

Abstract

Organ availability for transplantation has become an increasingly complex and difficult question in health economics and ethical practice. Advances in technology have seen prolonged life expectancy, and the global push for organs creates an ever-expanding gap between supply and demand, and a significant cost in bridging that gap. This article will examine the ethical implications for the nursing profession in regard to the procurement of organs from an impoverished seller’s market, also known as ‘Transplant Tourism’. This ethical dilemma concerns itself with resource allocation, informed consent and the concepts of egalitarianism and libertarianism. Transplant Tourism is an unacceptable trespass against human dignity and rights from both a nursing and collective viewpoint. Currently, the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Council, the Royal college of Nursing Australia, The Royal College of Nursing (UK) and the American Nurses Association do not have position statements on transplant tourism, and this diminishes us as a force for change. It diminishes our role as advocates for the most marginalised in our world to have access to care and to choice and excludes us from a very contemporary real debate about the mismatch of organ demand and supply in our own communities. As a profession, we must have a voice in health policy and human rights, and according to our Code of Ethics in Australia and around the world, act to promote and protect the fundamental human right to healthcare and dignity. © 2015, © The Author(s) 2015.

Author Keywords

Code of ethics Resource allocation nursing ethics Transplant tourism Organ trafficking

Index Keywords

organ transplantation nurse Australia nursing economics health care policy donor tourism human dignity Tissue Donors college human ethics medical ethics Codes of Ethics resource allocation informed consent Humans health economics human tissue life expectancy occupation voice human experiment midwife medical tourism market Health Policy organ trafficking Ethics, Nursing

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84994792061&doi=10.1177%2f0969733015581537&partnerID=40&md5=905a74e59fc148f0a9bd5f1426eb947f

DOI: 10.1177/0969733015581537
ISSN: 09697330
Original Language: English