SteinbrookR., “Public Solicitation of Organ Donors,”New England Journal of Medicine353, no. 5 (2005): 441–44; DelmonicoF. L., “Exchanging Kidneys – Advances in Living-Donor Transplantation,”New England Journal of Medicine350 (2004): 1812–4; TruogR. D., “The Ethics of Organ Donation by Living Donors,”New England Journal of Medicine353, no. 5 (2005): 444–6.
2.
See e.g., EpsteinR., Mortal Peril (Chicago: Addison Wellesley, 1997).
3.
Many of the papers outlining these positions are cited in BrennanT. A., Just Doctoring: Medical Ethics in the Liberal State (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991).
4.
DrukkerA., “Payment for Organ Donation: Unacceptable or a Possible Solution?”IPNA18 (2003): 198–199; FriedlaenderM. M., “The Right to Sell or Buy a Kidney: Are We Failing Our Patients?”The Lancet359, no. 1: 971–73.
5.
See Delmonico, supra note 1.
6.
See Steinbrook, supra note 1.
7.
Id.
8.
See supra note 3.
9.
MatasA. J.SchnitzlerM., “Payment for Living Donor (Vendor) Kidneys: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis,”American Journal of Transplantation4, no. 2 (2004): 216–221.
10.
GoyalM.MehtaR. L.SchneidermanL. J.SehgalA. R., “Economic and Health Consequences of Selling a Kidney in India,”JAMA288, no. 13 (2002): 1589–92.
11.
GawandeA., “Letting People Peddle Their Kidneys Might Save Lives, but the Ethical Price Is Too High,”Slate, 1998, available at <http://www.slate.com/id/3680/> (last visited April 9, 2007).
12.
BrinkleyD., The Great Deluge (New York: Harper Collins, 2006).
13.
Project of the ABIM Foundation, The ACP-ASIM Foundation, and The European Federation of Internal Medicine, “Medical Professionalism in the New Millennium: A Physician Charter,”Annals of Internal Medicine136, no. 3 (2002): 243–6.
14.
HarrisJ.ErinC., “”An Ethically Defensible Market in Organs,” Editorial”, British Medical Journal325, no. 7356 (2001): 114–115.