This post is not intended to endorse any particular course of action for one's life, especially if that potentially jeopardizes your health and well-being. Please do your own research and consider how that intersects with your values.
I am considering donating a lobe of my liver in a non-directed process and would welcome some community perspective:
- Is this something you have researched or have done yourself?
- Do you know anyone who has?
- What are your thoughts about this from a cost-benefit/impact perspective?
- A bit of context:
- I am, by all accounts, healthy and would likely be eligible
- I am okay with voluntary physical discomfort for others' benefit:
- I am a regular double-red blood donor
- I have already donated a kidney in a non-directed donation
- I participate in challenge trials when opportunities with high-impact potential become available (I recently participated in a Shigella study and am considering Malaria, Dengue, and Zika options for the fall)
Thank you, in advance, for sharing your perspective!
Hi Kyle,
If you plan on donating, I think donating through UNOS's pilot program for paired liver donation is the highest impact way for an American to donate lobe currently.
I would do a BOTEC for how much benefit the recipient would get versus the expected loss of life to you due to surgery risk and long-term effects.
If you are earning to give, I would check out your employer's policy for time off for organ donation as well as the possibility for reimbursement of expenses through NLDAC (which you very well may be familiar with through your kidney experience).
Love this BOTEC - thumbs up for more loose BOTECs on the forum.
The chance of death is too high to be realistic - better I think to go with the 1000, which brings your BOTEC closer to $2000. I would at least double the earning to $30 on average though, so then $4000.
Either way, like you say hardly slamdunk cost-effective
Good job, and it surprises me that this seems so borderline cost effective. Nice one