Stumbling Toward Equity: The Role of Government in Kidney Transplantation

23 Pages Posted: 2 Jul 2014

See all articles by Laura Dooley

Laura Dooley

Touro Law Center

Robert Gaston

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Date Written: 1998

Abstract

In Mortal Peril, Professor Epstein is critical of the current, regulated system for organ donation and suggests that a market for organ tissue would better meet the needs of patients. In this response to Professor Epstein, Professor Laura Dooley and Dr. Robert Gaston pair their skills to attack Professor Epstein's analysis. As they have done on several other occasions, Professors Dooley and Gaston argue that the kidney donation and transplantation arena is fraught with racial inequity, and that Professor Epstein's proposal for a market in kidneys will exacerbate this inequity. The authors maintain that to prevent the poor from being excluded from transplants, the government plays a critical (if imperfect) role in the allocation of these scarce resources. Furthermore, government intervention is acceptable to correct past discrimination because there is scientific evidence that the disproportionate incidence of kidney failure in African Americans is related to the evolutionary pressures of slave trading and slavery. Professors Dooley and Gaston also defend their previous efforts to change the government system of allocation and characterize the government's willingness to adopt their recommendations as an appropriate response to scientific research rather than a governmental susceptibility to lobbying from special interest groups. Finally, the authors criticize Professor Epstein's argument that dialysis is a viable alternative to transplantation because there are significant differences in "quality of life, morbidity and survival." Professors Dooley and Gaston conclude that government intervention is necessary for maintaining the equity in kidney transplantation that a market system would not.

Keywords: law, government, kidney transplantation, racial inequity

Suggested Citation

Dooley, Laura and Gaston, Robert, Stumbling Toward Equity: The Role of Government in Kidney Transplantation (1998). University of Illinois Law Review, p. 703, 1998, Arizona Summit Law School Research Paper , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2460792

Laura Dooley (Contact Author)

Touro Law Center ( email )

225 Eastview Drive
Central Islip, NY 11722
United States

Robert Gaston

University of Alabama at Birmingham ( email )

Birmingham, AL 35294-4460
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
34
Abstract Views
843
PlumX Metrics