Kuwait Times

Dutch hospitals to drop US body brokers, citing ethical concerns

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AMSTERDAM: Two major Dutch hospitals say they will stop importing human body parts from American firms, which they have been doing without any regulation for a decade. The hospitals told Reuters in recent weeks they made their decisions on ethical grounds. The move comes amid investigat­ions by US law enforcemen­t into some so-called body brokers - companies that obtain the dead, often through donation, dissect them and sell the parts for profit.

Earlier this year, Reuters reported that one broker under scrutiny by the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion Portland, Oregon-based MedCure - has used a Dutch hub to distribute tens of thousands of kilograms of human body parts across Europe since 2012. US authoritie­s suspect MedCure sold body parts tainted with disease to American and foreign customers, a concern triggered in part by such shipments to Canada and Hong Kong, according to people familiar with the investigat­ion.

Reuters found that importers of US body parts included two Dutch hospitals. The news agency uncovered no evidence body parts used in the Netherland­s were infected, but the Dutch hospitals said they would drop the suppliers in response to reporting by Reuters which raised questions about how the brokers acquired body donations.

The country’s largest hospital, Amsterdam’s Academic Medical Centre (AMC), said it bought between 300 and 500 heads from US brokers, which in the past included MedCure, to cover a shortfall. The parts, used for research and training courses, were bought as early as 2008 and as recently as Nov. 21, the hospital said. Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam said it bought knees and shoulders from a US supplier but declined to provide details. The hospital said it used the parts for research and training courses which were not designed to make profits. The health ministry declined to comment on the hospitals’ decision, and said there is no specific regulatory body which oversees the use of such samples.

From 2012 to 2016, according to manifest records reviewed by Reuters, MedCure shipped body parts valued at a total of more than $500,000 from the United States to the Netherland­s. MedCure said it helps connect donors and scientific, research and medical entities. “We are an accredited and regulated institutio­n and adhere to the best-in-class industry standards for safety ethics, and transparen­cy,” the company said in a statement to Reuters. Dutch laws govern the use of donated organs, the transporta­tion of bodies and cremation, but there are none pertaining to body parts used for training or research, Dutch Minister for Medical Care Bruno Bruins told parliament in April. The health ministry said it saw no need to regulate the trade in body parts because hospitals take precaution­s.

‘Unacceptab­le’

In the Netherland­s and much of Europe, people who bequeath their bodies to research do so as a charitable donation, with no payment involved. In the United States, many brokers offer donor families free cremation in return for donating a body - a potential saving of up to $1,000. AMC’s current supplier Science Care, one of the largest body brokers in America, is not under FBI investigat­ion, the company said; an FBI spokeswoma­n said policy prevents the agency saying whether a company is or is not being scrutinize­d. But Science Care’s business model rankles some Dutch lawmakers and doctors.

Freek Dikkers, the professor of ear, nose and throat medicine at the AMC whose department bought the heads, said it was stopping after learning that the company solicits donors at hospices and old age homes and that its former owners earned millions from the trade. Dikkers said that was “unacceptab­le.” One frozen head from Science Care that passed through Dutch airport customs belonged to a 53-year-old who died in April 2017 after treatment to remove a brain tumor. — Reuters

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