The National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI) warned the public against the illegal sale of human kidneys.
The warning was raised following the arrest of a broker who had tried to sell the kidney of a friend on social media.
According to the victim “Carlo”, he was enticed by the suspect to sell his kidney for P250,000. He said he needed the money to pay his rent.
NKTI Deputy Executive Director for Medical Services Romina Danguilan said illegal organ trafficking showed the desperation of some patients looking for a donor as well as middlemen who were trying to take advantage of potential donors.
“You can see and you can feel the desperation of our dialysis patients, that they don’t like this life of dialysis. They want to go back to a more normal life. It’s really a problem,” she said in a TeleRadyo Serbisyo interview.
Danguilan said the donation of a kidney should be done freely and not through financial rewards.
“’I’ll give you my kidney if you give me a car. Don’t go that… don’t use a third party like a broker. Middleman at broker pinakabawal. Do not deal with a third party,” she said.
“The kidney is a precious organ. Have respect for yourself,” she added, The NKTI official said donor support such as paying for a donor’s PhilHealth premiums is allowed “but it is out of the compassion of the recipient.”
She noted that NKTI has strict rules on organ donation, with a multidisciplinary team checking the background of the potential donor.
The NKTI currently has 170 patients looking for a donor, with another 150 patients on the waiting list for a deceased donor.