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  • It is 3:30 in the morning.

  • I am at dialysis.

  • I will have to be here for three and a half hours,

  • so here we go.

  • Our government has a system to recover and distribute

  • organs, and it’s failing the more than 100,000 Americans

  • waiting for organs.

  • 28,000 organs go to waste in our country

  • every year, instead of going to the patients in need.

  • My name is Maddi Bertrand and I

  • am in need of new lungs.

  • My name is Angelo and I’m in need of a kidney transplant.

  • I’m Tonya and I need a kidney.

  • Youve all seen those ads asking you to register

  • to be an organ donor.

  • I’m an organ donor.

  • I’m an organ donor.

  • Sign up to be an organ donor today.

  • While that’s really important,

  • that alone won’t solve the problem.

  • My chance of getting an organ depends on the state

  • that I live in.

  • In the state of New York, I’m expected

  • to wait between seven to nine years for a kidney.

  • So I’m driving to other states and other hospitals

  • to get on their list.

  • There are 58 O.P.O.s in the United States

  • organ procurement organizations.

  • We call them O.P.O.s.

  • And they are tasked with getting the organ

  • from the donor to the recipient in need.

  • They self-report their metrics to their boss,

  • the federal government.

  • I used to work at an O.P.O.

  • And we reported false numbers to make

  • it appear we were doing better than we were.

  • Imagine there are 10 people who die

  • and they all have healthy organs that

  • can save someone’s life.

  • We might later falsely report that only four or five

  • of those people had healthy enough organs for donation

  • and make it look like we were more

  • successful in our recovery effort than we were.

  • In fact, we might not even visit all 10 people.

  • I’m definitely sicker than I was a month ago.

  • I can feel it in my body.

  • I can just feel it.

  • Imagine if the government could easily

  • identify the good-performing O.P.O.s from the bad

  • and replace the bad-performing O.P.O.s when necessary.

  • If O.P.O.s were operating at optimal rates,

  • the waiting list for livers and lungs

  • would be eliminated within two years.

  • I don’t want to see myself in 10 years still on dialysis.

  • O.P.O.s have a monopoly on the market that they operate in.

  • The research shows a lack of oversight, inefficiency

  • and a culture of dishonesty.

  • North Carolina is going to be my third state.

  • I may have to go to Utah.

  • I may have to go to Florida.

  • I have to take my health into my own hands.

  • I have to be my own advocate.

  • I just knew that I would get more out of Instagram

  • than from the actual health care system.

  • Unlike Tonya and Angelo, I can’t D.I.Y. the system.

  • My lungs,

  • they're feeling,

  • they're close to respiratory failure.

  • The system has to work for me.

  • The Department of Health and Human Services,

  • which is responsible for this process,

  • needs to hold O.P.O.s accountable by creating a performance

  • metrics that does not allow for self-reporting

  • or self-interpretation.

It is 3:30 in the morning.

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2万8000個の臓器が必要な患者に届かない理由|NYTオピニオン (Why 28,000 Organs Won’t Make it to Patients in Need | NYT Opinion)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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