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If We Pay Football Players, Why Not Kidney Donors?

Publication ,  Journal Article
Cook, PJ; Krawiec, K
Published in: Regulation
2018

Ethicists who oppose compensating kidney donors claim they do so because kidney donation is risky for the donor’s health, donors may not appreciate the risks and may be cognitively biased in other ways, and donors may come from disadvantaged groups and thus could be exploited. However, few ethical qualms are raised about professional football players, who face much greater health risks than kidney donors, have much less counseling and screening concerning that risk, and who often come from racial and economic groups deemed disadvantaged. It thus seems that either ethicists—and the law—should ban both professional football and compensated organ donation, allow both, or allow compensated organ donation but prohibit professional football. The fact that we choose none of those options raises questions about the wisdom of the compensation ban

Duke Scholars

Published In

Regulation

ISSN

0147-0590

Publication Date

2018

Volume

41

Start / End Page

12 / 17

Publisher

Cato Institute
 

Citation

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Cook, P. J., & Krawiec, K. (2018). If We Pay Football Players, Why Not Kidney Donors? Regulation, 41, 12–17.
Cook, P. J., and Kimberly Krawiec. “If We Pay Football Players, Why Not Kidney Donors?Regulation 41 (2018): 12–17.
Cook PJ, Krawiec K. If We Pay Football Players, Why Not Kidney Donors? Regulation. 2018;41:12–7.
Cook, P. J., and Kimberly Krawiec. “If We Pay Football Players, Why Not Kidney Donors?Regulation, vol. 41, Cato Institute, 2018, pp. 12–17.
Cook PJ, Krawiec K. If We Pay Football Players, Why Not Kidney Donors? Regulation. Cato Institute; 2018;41:12–17.

Published In

Regulation

ISSN

0147-0590

Publication Date

2018

Volume

41

Start / End Page

12 / 17

Publisher

Cato Institute