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Scarce Goods: Justice, Fairness, and Organ Transplantation
 
 
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Scarce Goods: Justice, Fairness, and Organ Transplantation [Hardcover]

Tom Koch (Author)

Price: $110.95 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

November 30, 2001 0275974324 978-0275974329

In 1841 the American sailing ship William Brown struck an iceberg. About half of the passengers and all of the crew were saved in two small, open boats. The next night, half of the passengers in the larger long-boat were thrown overboard because the boat was overfull. This was the first case of lifeboat ethics, of hard choices in the face of scarcity. Since then the question has been who should die so that others, equally needy, might live? Both the case of the William Brown and the ethics it spawned have been used in recent years to describe the problem of health care rationing generally, and organ transplantation specifically.

Koch reexamines and reinterpretes the paradigm case of lifeboat ethics, the story of the William Brown, not as an unavoidable tragedy, but as an avoidable series of errors. Its relation to more general issues of distributive justice are then considered. The lessons learned from both the historical review and its application to distributive principles are then applied to the problem of graft organ distribution in the United States. Through the use of maps, the problem of organ distribution is considered at a range of scales, from the international to the urban. The contextual issues become more evident as one moves from international to hemispheric, fron national to regional, and then local systems. Finally, Koch reviews the lessons in light of other problems of distribution in the face of scarcity. The central lesson-that scarcity is exacerbated where it is not in fact created by our distributive programs-is explored thoroughly. The result is no good choices for anyone and the continuation of the scarcity that for most seems inevitable, but, from the evidence provided, is itself an outcome of inequalities of distribution at different scales of society. Of particular interest to students, scholars, and policymakers involved with issues of planning and health care economics, medical geography, and concepts of justice.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Dr. Koch's Scarce Goods rethinks the debate about the distribution of organs for transplantation. His use of maps to analyze what is happening today and to examine alternative strategies reshapes and advances our thinking."-Denis Wood Author The Power of Maps, Home Rules, Seeing Through Maps

Book Description

Examines the reasons for scarcity of transplantable human organs in the American medical system.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On the evening of April 19, 1841, the American sailing ship William Brown was making 10 knots under full sail when, shortly after nine o'clock, it struck an iceberg several hundred miles off the Newfoundland coast. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sufficient auxiliary craft, transplantable human organs, organ transplant system, solid organ donation, transplant dilemma, transplant eligibility, disappearing states, donation rates, transplant hospitals, organ supply, graft organs, hospital participants, organ allocation, lifeboat ethics, transplantation system, transplant service, medical urgency, transplantation network, organ shortage, natural scarcity, transplant centers, organ sharing, donation process, utilitarian fashion, organ procurement
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, William Brown, New York, Captain Harris, Los Angeles, Francis Rhodes, Salt Lake City, Gulf Stream, John Messer, North Americans, South African, New England, Alexander William Holmes, Pacific Northwest, Rhode Island, Final Rule, North Dakota, Baby Jack, Great Britain, Judith Massey, Mickey Mantle, Puerto Rico, San Diego, San Francisco, Donna Shalala
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