Immigrant organ transplants in
the
United States
have
b
ecome a hot topic since the news of the
b
otched heart-lung transplant surgery of Jesica Santiallan, a young girl from
Mexico
died. Doctors at
Duke
University
Medical
Center
in
North
Carol
ina
perfo
rm
ed the surgery. The controversy concerning organ transplants and foreigners
initially surfaced in the 1980’s, and involves a mixture of politics,
nationality and medicine that has the transplants networks like the United
Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), and groups who favor restricting immigration,
like North
Carol
ina
Listens. Immigration advocates argue that
U. S.
citizens are more likely to
b
enefit from organs donated
b
y noncitizens than the reverse. In 2001,
U.S.
citizens received 96.2 percent of the transplants in the country while 94.8
percent of the organ donors were citizens. This has
b
een the constant trend for more than a decade according to the UNOS.
UNOS, the non-profit group that
coord
ina
tes the nation’s transplant system linking organ donors with recipients
nationwide, has a policy that imposes a limit on the num
b
er of organs that can
b
e transplanted to foreigners in a given year. A center may not transplant more
than 5 percent of organs to immigrants,
b
ut there is no limit to the num
b
er of organs a noncitizen may donate. Hospitals have the discretion to put
foreign citizens, including illegal immigrants, on the national waiting list for
transplants. From 1998 to 2001, organ donations from foreign residents increased
from 0.1 to 2.8. This progress in organ donations is likely a result of outreach
efforts to encourage donations, particularly in the Hispanic community.
At
Duke
University
Medical
Center
, 2,541 people have received organ transplants at Duke from 1998 to 2002, there
were n
o n
onresident noncitizens recorded. But with more than 80,000 people on a national
waiting list and more than 5,500 people dying each year
b
efore they can receive transplants, the question still lingers a
b
out whether foreigners should have the same access to the nation’s limited
pool of donated organs. Ron Woodard, the president of North
Carol
ina
Listens, while commenting on the sadness of the Santillan situation, said that
if he was on the waiting list his thought would
b
e, “Why were organs given to someone who was here illegally?” Joel Newman,
UNOS spokesman says, “Part of the rationale is that it may
b
e hypocritical to accept donors who are not
U.S.
citizens,
b
ut not allow them to
b
e transplant recipients.”
There
are groups that
b
elieve
that US citizens should
b
e
given priority in receiving transplants. But immigrant advocates point out
that national data for 2001 shows 2 percent of the total donors were foreigners
who died in the
United
States
while just 1 percent of transplants went to foreign recipients. Immigration
restrictionist groups also argue that the medical expenses of transplants
and related care for illegal immigrants with no health insurance and who cannot
pay are a
b
urden to
hospitals,
U.S.
taxpayers and insured patients. Jesica Santiallan, however, received no
government funds, had 80 percent of her medical expenses paid
b
y the her
mother's employer's insurance plan and the
b
alance
was covered
b
y
the foundation esta
b
lished
b
y
the family’s
b
enefactor.
The government has long stopped reim
b
ursing
hospitals for transplants for illegal immigrants.