Singapore is considering legalizing kidney trading to help meet demand for kidney transplants, the city-state's health minister said yesterday.
The Health Ministry1 will examine the feasibility of providing payments to unrelated donors3 to augment4 the supply of kidneys, said Khaw Boon5 Wan6 in Parliament, acknowledging that the suggestion has stirred controversy7.
"We should not reject any idea just because it is radical8 or controversial," Khaw said. "We may be able to find an acceptable way to allow a meaningful compensation for some living, unrelated kidney donors, without breaching9 ethical10 principles or hurting the sensitivities of others."
Khaw said the ministry would review possible changes to current legislation to allow payments for donations from third parties such as those from the charity and religious sectors11. Under the proposal, which would need to be approved by Parliament to become law, patients would also get help in finding donors.
"There are desperate patients out there wishing to live and desperately12 poor people willing to exchange a kidney for a hopefully improved life," he said. "Criminalizing organ trading does not eliminate it ... it merely breeds a black market."
Khaw also said the Health Ministry would push to amend13 existing laws on organ transplants to remove an age limit on deceased donors, currently set at 60 years, because "the suitability of the organ depends on its condition rather than the age of the donor2."
The two initiatives should enable Singapore to carry out 70 percent of the kidney transplants needed every year.
The two initiatives should raise Singapore's sufficiency in kidney transplants from 50 percent to 70 percent, the minister said. He said about 1,000 new cases of kidney failure are diagnosed every year, with nearly 40 percent unable to survive the first year.
Khaw's comments follow the cases of two Indonesian men who were jailed and fined by a Singapore court earlier this month after being convicted of agreeing to sell their kidneys to two patients in the city-state.