Publication | Open Access
The Invisible Issue of Organ Laundering
29
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Global Health LawCross-border CrimeOrgan DonationLawHealth LawMedical TourismOrgan ProcurementPublic HealthFinancial CrimeOrgan TraffickingGlobal InstitutionsOrgan AllocationInternational LawGlobalizationInvisible IssueMoney LaunderingGlobal HealthInternational HealthLaw EnforcementInternational Institutions
Global institutions, although suggesting measures to deter organ trafficking, reiterate the lack of official statistics about this illegal trade. In this article, we explore the reasons why organ trafficking remains unreported. We argue that the complex factors that perpetuate invisibility facilitate trafficked organs being "laundered" in the health care systems of the purchaser's country, hindering accurate estimation of the problem. The factors are as follows: (a) issues of globalization, jurisdiction, and law enforcement; (b) the power of health care professionals; (c) the reimbursement of transplantation costs abroad by insurers; (d) ambivalence of the victim status of the sellers; and (e) the buyers as vulnerable offenders.
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