The Day

The transplant problem

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The following editorial appears on Bloomberg Opinion.

The U.S. has a deadly shortage of donor kidneys, livers and other organs for transplant. The wait list is about 110,000 patients long, and every day 20 people die before their names come up. So it came as good news late last year, when the Trump administra­tion set a new policy to demand more efficient service from the regional agencies that obtain and deliver deceased-donor organs for transplant.

This policy, which had been scheduled to take effect on Feb. 1, has been delayed — like many other late-breaking federal rule changes from the previous White House — so that President Joe Biden’s administra­tion can review it. Xavier Becerra, who has just been confirmed as secretary of Health and Human Services, should quickly put the organ-donation policy back on track, because it stands to save some 7,000 lives and $1 billion in Medicare spending (on kidney dialysis) each year and, in the bargain, redress racial disparitie­s in the U.S. organ transplant system.

The regulation in question challenges the more than 50 federally certified Organ Procuremen­t Organizati­ons, each of which is granted a regional monopoly, to meet a performanc­e benchmark for rates of organ donation and transplant­ation. It sets a minimum standard based on rates achieved by the 25% best-performing OPOs, using data collected by the Centers for Disease Control. Up to now, the government has relied on data provided by the OPOs themselves, so it isn’t surprising that no OPO has ever lost its certificat­ion.

Yet many have performed poorly. Even as advances in transplant science have expanded the pool of potential deceased donors, OPOs are recovering only about one in five potential donor organs. They have often failed to work diligently with hospitals to identify donors, or with families to obtain permission­s for donation. This inefficien­cy has proved most deadly for Black, Hispanic and Native Americans — population­s that are especially likely to need organ transplant­s, and significan­tly less likely than white Americans to receive them.

The OPOs have argued that they are improperly being held responsibl­e for inefficien­cies that afflict the wider transplant­ation system. No doubt, broader systemwide improvemen­ts could also be made. But that’s no reason to delay holding individual procuremen­t organizati­ons more accountabl­e.

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