The Meat Market
(Summary & Questions-Answers)
Tabarrok
raises the issue of shortage of human organs for transplants in the United
States, and proposes a solution i.e. payment to the living donors. He gives the
example of Singapore, Iran and Israel to support his idea of organ purchase
from the donors. Tabarrok states that a large number of people suffer from
kidney disease in the world. In the United States while 83,000 people were
waiting on the official kidney-transplant list, only 16,500 people received a
kidney transplant in 2008. And nearly 5,000 died waiting for the transplant. To
deal with the shortages, surgeons adopt several methods. The most extreme
method is the routine removal. It is an act of removing pieces of tissue from
dead patients for transplant without any prior consent. Similarly medical doctors
in some states of America while conducting autopsies may harvest corneas
without notifying the family of the deceased one. This practice looks
controversial though it is legal.
According
to the law, human organs are taken only after the doctors declare death of the
donors. While transplanting, the doctors must make sure about the point where
the donor dies, but not his organs. However, it’s not easy to tell the exact
time of death. Nobody can identify the exact line between life and death. This
is the paradox of deceased donation. So we cannot exactly say whether the
organs are harvested from a dead donor or living one. In the past brain dead
donors were a good source of harvesting organs for transplantation. But these
days, decreasing crime rate and increasing automobile safety have led to fewer
potential brain-dead donors than in the past. Now the doctors are giving focus
on donation after cardiac death though this practice is controversial. Due to
the scarcity of organs, the doctors are forced to transplant the organs which
were thought to be unsuitable in the past. Kidneys of overage or unhealthy
people are being donated. Thus, the quality of transplants is questionable
since it may cause harms rather than benefits to the health of the receivers. But
the doctors have no alternative either.
Several
countries are following the concept of presumed consent. According to this
concept, doctors can use the organs of the deceased without the prior consent
of the dead ones or their family members, so everyone is taken as a potential
organ donor unless they have denied this system by signing a non-organ-donor
card. Presumed consent is popular in Europe, and India is planning to introduce
this program. However, it has not flourished in America, but this can be experimented
at the state level for its development. Due to the shortage of organs for
transplants, the black market is growing. It covers about ten percent of
transplants worldwide. It may have negative impact on the health of the donors
as they are less likely to get proper postoperative care. So it is a good idea
to legalize the sale of organs for the overall benefit of all.
Iran
has solved the shortage of transplant organs. It has developed a legal payment
system for organ donation. In this system, organs are not bought and sold at
the bazaar. They have established a non-profit organization called Dialysis and
Transplant Patients Association (Datpa) that helps provide kidneys to the needy
patients. Patients who cannot manage a kidney from a deceased donor or from a
related living donor apply to Datpa. Datpa has a list of medically evaluated
potential donors. The donors are paid $1,200 by the Iranian government, and the
kidney recipients pay between $2,300 and $4,500. The poor recipients are
supported by charitable organizations. Thus, in Iran no patients are deprived
of kidney transplants.
Iranian
system and black market make it clear that the shortage of organs can be solved
by paying the living donors. It is effective as well as cheaper. Iran
introduced the system in 1988 and eliminated the shortage of kidneys by
1999. Nobel Laureate economist Gary Becker and Julio Elias state that a
payment of $15,000 to living donors is likely to minimize the shortage of
kidneys in America. And the federal government can pay the donors. This is
cheaper than the dialysis.
The
world governments are gradually becoming successful to harvest kidneys from the
living donors. As human body can function properly with one kidney, there is no
harm in donating the other kidney. But at the same time, it’s an ugly practice.
The concerned agencies have failed to solve it reasonably. Is it justifiable to
extract kidneys from the living ones while a number of kidneys that could have
saved lives are being buried and burned every day? The government can introduce
the policies and programs to encourage the people to donate their organs after
their death. Singapore and Israel have introduced nonmonetary incentives
systems for potential organ donors. Singapore does not force its citizens
to sign the presumed consent system, but people who opt out are given a low
priority on the transplant waiting list in case they need an organ. This
concept of no give, no take surely encourages people to follow the presumed
consent system. Even the people who find the idea of paying for organs
disgusting accept the ethical foundation of no give, no take. Moreover, it
helps reduce the shortage because it encourages people to sign the organ donor
card. Israel has developed a point system to systematize the organ transplants
in an effective and fair manner.
The
shortage of organs is in increasing order worldwide, however, it can be solved
if we follow the successful stories of different nations, and innovate some new
methods. Presumed consent, financial compensation for living and deceased
donors, and point systems would surely increase the availability of transplant
organs.
Questions
1.What, according to Tabarrok, is “the great paradox of deceased
donation” (5)? Why is this paradox significant?
According
to the law, human organs are taken only after the doctors declare death of the
donors. While transplanting, the doctors must make sure about the point where
the donor dies, but not his organs. However, it’s not easy to tell the exact
time of death. Nobody can identify the exact line between life and death. This
is the paradox of deceased donation. So we cannot exactly say whether the
organs are harvested from a dead donor or living one. This paradox is
significant because it raises an ethical issue. It forces us to think whether
we are taking one life in order to save the other.
2. What positive developments in the last
several decades have “led to fewer potential brain-dead donors than in the
past” (6)?
In
the past brain dead donors were a good source of harvesting organs for
transplantation. But these days, decreasing crime rate and increasing
automobile safety have led to fewer potential brain-dead donors than in the
past. Because of the security and automobile safety, the number of brain deaths
has significantly gone down. It’s a good news for the world. However, it is
taking a heavy toll on the people who wait for the organ transplants for their
survival.
3. Tabarrok uses definition in paragraph 7. What
does he define, and how does this definition help him achieve his essay’s
purpose?
Tabarrok
defines the term expanded criteria organs. It allows the
doctors to use the organs of even overage or unhealthy people for transplants.
Even if it is risky, the doctors are forced to use them owing to the shortage
of organs. Thus the organs which were considered unsuitable in the past have
become suitable now. This definition helps the writer to show the critical
condition of the waiting patients who are forced to accept even the cancerous
or weak organs. This shows the increasing shortage of the organs for
transplant. Showing such high demand of organs, he is able to recommend all the
stakeholders to follow some methods for the solution of the problem.
4. Tabarrok identifies one country that has
eliminated shortages in transplant organs. Which country? How has this been
accomplished?
Iran
has eliminated the shortage in transplant organs. It has developed a legal
payment system for organ donation. In this system, organs are not bought and
sold at the bazaar. They have established a non-profit organization called
Dialysis and Transplant Patients Association (Datpa) that helps provide kidneys
to the needy patients. Patients who cannot manage a kidney from a deceased
donor or from a related living donor apply to Datpa. Datpa has a list of
medically evaluated potential donors from a pool of applicants. The donors are
paid $1,200 by the Iranian government, and the kidney recipients pay between
$2,300 and $4,500. The poor recipients are supported by charitable
organizations. Thus, in Iran no patients are deprived of kidney transplants.
5. What is your reaction to Tabarrok’s title? To
his essay’s opening sentence? Do you think these are the reactions he expected
readers to have? Explain.
When
I read the title The meat market it reminded me of a place
where meat is sold. I thought the essay is about some issues related with meat.
However, as I started reading the essay, I found the very idea “Harvesting
human organs for sale” quite disgusting. I thought of some heinous practice we
see in a horror story. Of course, the writer might have expected such reactions
from the readers. Such a beginning attracts readers’ attention, and makes the
text engaging. As the readers continue to read, they know that things to be
discussed here are quite different from they had expected.
6. Tabarrok’s introduction relies on certain assumptions
regarding his readers’ attitudes about organ harvesting. What are these
assumptions? Do you find this introduction effective? Why or why not?
Tabarrok’s
opening sentence “Harvesting human organs for sale” looks quite disgusting.
This makes the readers develop negative attitudes towards this practice because
trade of human organs cannot be accepted in a civilized society. And when he
gives the information about the practice of paying money to donors in Singapore
and Iran, the readers tend to believe that it is the poor who are likely to
sell their organs at the cost of their lives. This cannot be acceptable as it
stands against the principle of equality, justice, and above all, humanity. But
the concept of harvesting human organs turns out to be different from what the
readers have assumed.
I
find this introduction effective. Such a beginning attracts readers’ attention,
and makes the text engaging. Had he started the essay giving a general
information about the scarcity of organs for transplant, it would not have been
able to attract the readers’ attention.
7. According to Tabarrok, presumed consent “has
less support in the U.S.” (9) than in other countries. What does he think might
change that? Does he support “presumed consent”?
Several
countries are following the concept of presumed consent. According to this
concept, doctors can use the organs of the deceased without the prior consent
of the dead ones or their family members. So everyone is taken as a potential
organ donor unless they deny this system by signing a non-organ-donor card.
Presumed consent is popular in Europe, and India is planning to introduce this
program.
However,
it has not flourished in America, but this can be experimented at the state
level for its development. The states can enforce this system in their own
ways. The writer supports presumed consent. He gives the examples of the
countries which have successfully implemented it. He believes that in America
too it will surely address the scarcity of organ transplants.
8. In paragraph 5, Tabarrok raises one of the
most profound questions influencing the debate about organ donations: what is
the dividing line between life and death? However, he avoids further discussion
of this issue in his essay. Why? Would his essay have been stronger if he had
elaborated on the subject? Why or why not?
The
issue of organ donation is debatable because people do not have a single
opinion about the dividing line between life and death. While transplanting
organs, the doctors must make sure about the point where the donor dies, but
not his organs. So how can the doctors after a particular transplant convince
the family of the dead one that the organs were harvested only after the
patient’s death?
Tabarrok
avoids further discussion of this issue because this is not the central idea of
his essay. The purpose of writing this essay is to address the shortage of
organs for transplants. So he presents several methods for the enough
availability of the organs. Had he discussed further about this debatable
issue, he would not have become successful to fulfill the purpose of the essay.
9. Tabarrok is an economist. Do you think he
approaches the subject differently from the way a member of the clergy, a
lawyer, or a physician would? What advantages does his perspective give him?
As
an economist, Tabarrok seeks solution of the issue from financial perspectives.
He refers to the practice of Iran and Singapore where the donors are paid a
certain amount of money. What would happen to the poor patients who cannot buy
kidneys? And he fails to see horrible consequences of this practice. It seems
to encourage the poor people to sell their kidneys to meet with their daily
needs. He recognizes the system of presumed consent. Is it good idea to harvest
organs of the deceased without any prior consent? Surely a clergy and a lawyer
would raise the issue of one’s faith system and human rights respectively. A
clergy is less likely to agree with no give no take system too. Human beings
have their own rituals and cultural practices, some ethnic or religious
communities may have their own views about the organ donation. Is it
justifiable to force them to do what the state wants? Tabarrok seems to be
unconcerned about these aspects of humanity. Similarly, a physician would
look for some other ways like a new innovation for the solution of the issue.
And a clergy or a lawyer would have proposed some other ways too.
10. In paragraph 12, Tabarrok uses inductive
reasoning. Does his inference seem justified? Why or why not?
To
justify his argument Tabarrok employs inductive reasoning here. For him paying
living donors helps solve the issue of kidney shortage in America. It is
effective as well as cheaper. To support this argument, he refers to the
Iranian system, and an article of two Nobel Laurete economists. Iran
introduced the system in 1988 and eliminated the shortage of kidneys by
1999. Nobel Laureate economists Gary Becker and Julio Elias state that a
payment of $15,000 to living donors is likely to minimize the shortage of
kidneys in America. And the federal government can pay the donors. This is
cheaper than the dialysis.
His
inference seems justified. Tabarrok is able to convince the readers that buying
kidneys from the donors can help solve the issue. The Iranian system is the
best evidence to support his argument. And similarly reference to the research
articles strengthens his idea.
11. Tabarrok uses cause and effect several times
in the essay. Identify two examples. How effective are they? How do they
support his overall purpose?
Tabarrok
uses causes and effects several times in the essay. We can see cause and effect
relationship between shortage of organs for transplants and presumed consent.
Shortage of organs result in the practice of presumed consent. It is an act of
using the organs of dead patients for transplant without any prior consent. The
doctors are forced to use these organs for saving lives. This shows the
scarcity of organs, and by presenting this scenario of short supply, the writer
want to suggest that presumed consent can help solve the issue to some extent.
Similarly, the writer states that as people can leave with one kidney, it’s a
good idea to donate the other in order to save life by taking some financial
compensation. He suggests this idea in order to address the crisis of organs
for transplants. This helps to solve the problem which is the purpose of the
essay.
12. Tabarrok repeatedly writes in the passive
voice — for example, in paragraphs 4 and 8. Would rewriting such sentences in
the active voice make the sentences — and the writer’s argument — stronger? Why
or why not?
Passive
voice is used to give an emphasis on action. When things done are more
important than the doers, passive verbs are used. In paragraph 4 and 8, the
writer mentions about the initiatives taken so as to address the short supply
of organs for transplants. So it’s not necessary to mention who and what did
the work. The focus of the essay is not to list the names of the contributors
but to state the contribution. Thus rewriting the sentences in active voice
would weaken the writer’s argument.
13. Evaluate Tabarrok’s title. Given his purpose,
audience, and subject matter, do you think it is appropriate? Explain.
I
don’t think the title “The Meat Market” is appropriate. Had the writer had
negative attitudes towards the trend of organ transplants, it would have been
suitable. He strongly supports the idea of organ donation. The purpose of
writing this essay is to solve the short supply of organs for saving the lives
of people. For this, he does not hesitate to support even the debatable
practice like presumed consent. Similarly he advocates the financial
compensation for deceased and living donors. Since he does not see anything
unethical in organ trade for the pure objective of saving lives, he should have
chosen other title than ‘The Meat Market’.
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