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Quote of the Day

The uninsured give but rarely receive transplants

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Insurance Status of U.S. Organ Donors and Transplant Recipients: The Uninsured Give, but Rarely Receive

By Andrew A. Herring, Steffie Woolhandler, and David U. Himmelstein
International Journal of Health Services
Volume 38, Number 4

In September of 2005, one of us (Herring), then a third-year medical student, cared for a previously healthy 25-year-old uninsured day laborer who arrived at the emergency department with rapidly advancing idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The patient was ultimately deemed unsuitable for cardiac transplantation. The decision on transplantation was driven, in part, by realistic concern about the patient’s inability to pay for long-term immunosuppressive therapy and to support himself during recovery. Absent such resources, the likelihood of a successful outcome is compromised. The clinicians caring for him faced a wrenching dilemma: deny the patient a transplant, or use a scarce organ for a patient with a reduced chance of success. He died of heart failure two weeks after his initial presentation. This tragedy inspired us to examine data on the participation of the uninsured in organ transplantation, both as recipients and as donors.
Abstract
Organ transplantation is an expensive, life-saving technology. Previous studies have found that few transplant recipients in the United States lack health insurance (in part because patients may become eligible for special coverage because of their disability and transplant teams vigorously advocate for their patients). Few data are available on the insurance status of U.S. organ donors. The authors analyzed the 2003 National Inpatient Sample (NIS), a nationally representative 20 percent sample of U.S. hospital stays, and identified incident organ donors and recipients using ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure codes. The NIS sample included 1,447 organ donors and 4,962 transplant recipients, equivalent after weighting to 6,517 donors and 23,656 recipients nationwide; 16.9 percent of organ donors but only 0.8 percent of transplant recipients were uninsured. In multivariate analysis, compared with other inpatients organ donors were much more likely to be uninsured (OR 3.41, 95% CI 2.81-4.15), whereas transplant recipients were less likely to lack coverage (OR 0.08, 95% CI 0.06-0.12). Many uninsured Americans donate organs, but they rarely receive them.
https://pnhp.org/organ_donors/Transplants.pdf

Because of the mismatch between the numbers of individuals who are candidates to receive organ transplants and the numbers of donors available, sometimes difficult decisions have to be made as to who will receive the transplants. As complex as these decisions are, it is a sad commentary that, in the United States, we add one additional complicating factor: Does the potential recipient have insurance?
It is reassuring to note that the dedicated transplant teams can sometimes break through this barrier through vigorous advocacy on behalf of their patients. But it is wrong that they should have to do that. And it is especially wrong that uninsured candidates may be unsuccessful in negotiating this barrier.
These life and death decisions are not based on a lack of money; we are already spending more than enough. Rather people are dying merely because of the way we allocate that money. A single payer national health program would remove money as a consideration and allow us to concentrate on the other moral and ethical factors that should determine who lives and who dies.
What a terrible decision to have to make. But let’s not make it based on ability to pay.

The uninsured give but rarely receive transplants

Insurance Status of U.S. Organ Donors and Transplant Recipients: The Uninsured Give, but Rarely Receive

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By Andrew A. Herring, Steffie Woolhandler, and David U. Himmelstein
International Journal of Health Services
Volume 38, Number 4

In September of 2005, one of us (Herring), then a third-year medical student, cared for a previously healthy 25-year-old uninsured day laborer who arrived at the emergency department with rapidly advancing idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The patient was ultimately deemed unsuitable for cardiac transplantation. The decision on transplantation was driven, in part, by realistic concern about the patient’s inability to pay for long-term immunosuppressive therapy and to support himself during recovery. Absent such resources, the likelihood of a successful outcome is compromised. The clinicians caring for him faced a wrenching dilemma: deny the patient a transplant, or use a scarce organ for a patient with a reduced chance of success. He died of heart failure two weeks after his initial presentation. This tragedy inspired us to examine data on the participation of the uninsured in organ transplantation, both as recipients and as donors.

Abstract

Organ transplantation is an expensive, life-saving technology. Previous studies have found that few transplant recipients in the United States lack health insurance (in part because patients may become eligible for special coverage because of their disability and transplant teams vigorously advocate for their patients). Few data are available on the insurance status of U.S. organ donors. The authors analyzed the 2003 National Inpatient Sample (NIS), a nationally representative 20 percent sample of U.S. hospital stays, and identified incident organ donors and recipients using ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure codes. The NIS sample included 1,447 organ donors and 4,962 transplant recipients, equivalent after weighting to 6,517 donors and 23,656 recipients nationwide; 16.9 percent of organ donors but only 0.8 percent of transplant recipients were uninsured. In multivariate analysis, compared with other inpatients organ donors were much more likely to be uninsured (OR 3.41, 95% CI 2.81-4.15), whereas transplant recipients were less likely to lack coverage (OR 0.08, 95% CI 0.06-0.12). Many uninsured Americans donate organs, but they rarely receive them.

https://pnhp.org/organ_donors/Transplants.pdf

Comment:

By Don McCanne, MD

Because of the mismatch between the numbers of individuals who are candidates to receive organ transplants and the numbers of donors available, sometimes difficult decisions have to be made as to who will receive the transplants. As complex as these decisions are, it is a sad commentary that, in the United States, we add one additional complicating factor: Does the potential recipient have insurance?

It is reassuring to note that the dedicated transplant teams can sometimes break through this barrier through vigorous advocacy on behalf of their patients. But it is wrong that they should have to do that. And it is especially wrong that uninsured candidates may be unsuccessful in negotiating this barrier.

These life and death decisions are not based on a lack of money; we are already spending more than enough. Rather people are dying merely because of the way we allocate that money. A single payer national health program would remove money as a consideration and allow us to concentrate on the other moral and ethical factors that should determine who lives and who dies.

What a terrible decision to have to make. But let’s not make it based on ability to pay.

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