Nowadays, black market for organ sales is very activated because of lack of organs. In this case, the government is considering the possibility of legalization of human organ sales as a solution to reduce this problem. However, this would violate human dignity and deepen the healthy gap between the rich and the poor. It is argued that the legalization of selling human organs should be banned. First of all, dignity of humanity would be violated if this law is legislated. If organs are allowed to be sold legally, people will tend to sell their organs when they have financial difficulties. It leads to the exploitation of the poor and ignorant that they will easily sell their body parts for the monetary return. Selling organ possibly allow people …show more content…
The legalization creates a human organ market system, People who are willing and able to pay at high Price can get the organs, while economic need is the main factor affecting people to sell their organs. The rich () monopoly the market of organs and the poor have no chance to buy the organs in market system. The organ markets thereby benefit the rich while the poor (). Discrimination occurs as only the rich can buy organs .To protect the value of justice, the society has to bear responsibility to ensure that every person, whether rich or poor have equal opportunities to enjoy medical services. Also, poor patients can’t get the organs. This unfair distribution way causes the injustice of health benefits. Moreover, the legalization may decrease the quality of life of poor donors in long term. From a study of India’s organ market, the data shows that over 80 percent of donors got serious health problems after the transplantation surgery. Tentatively, it seems that the potential risks of surgery can be minimized because of the advance medical technology, but an increase in potential health menaces is still unavoidable for them. They may be weaker, or they even lose the ability to work because they lack parts of their bodies. Also, the organ market system under legalization even deprive the chance for these poor to get new organs as they don’t have the ability to pay. The impoverished may not be able to afford a transplant but may unduly be the ones selling their body parts. In the 2008 Istanbul summit on organ trafficking, from the interviews with paid donors in countries as far afield as Moldova, Pakistan and the Philippines, it is revealed that people want to overcome the monetary hardship by selling their own organs, but later they find that they still stuck at poverty, and were up against health wise. In this situation, legalization of organ sales can’t