Friday, May 18, 2007
TORONTO - Foreign patients who travel to China for transplants are likely
receiving organs culled from political prisoners who are alive when their
corneas, kidneys and livers are harvested, then left to die, an international
group of doctors armed with a chilling Canadian report is warning.
In a new twist on an old practice of using organs from executed criminals, China
has since 2000 turned to living donors and outlawed Falun Gong members to supply
a growing trade in medical transplants, Doctors Against Organ Harvesting said
yesterday during a public forum held at the University of Toronto.
With increasing numbers of Canadians on long waiting lists turning to China to
save their own lives, the newly formed organization is seeking to warn patients
that someone else's life is likely being sacrificed in the process of obtaining
organs.
"Each person who travels to China for an organ causes the death of another
human," said Dr. Torsten Trey, a Washington, D.C.-based physician and
founding member of Doctors Against Organ Harvesting.
The group is sounding the alarm in the medical community about mounting evidence
of unethical transplants in China. They want doctors to impress the information
upon their patients. They want hospitals and universities to close their doors
to visiting Chinese physicians and scholars looking to hone their techniques.
And they want medical journals to reject research on transplants conducted in
China.
"Medical science cannot build up any knowledge which is based on inhuman
and unethical procedures," said Dr. Trey, who compared China's pilfering of
organs from Falun Gong practitioners to Nazi medical experimentation during the
Holocaust.
Doctors Against Organ Harvesting was formed in the wake of a Canadian
investigation first released last year.
Authored by former Liberal MP David Kilgour and Winnipeg human rights lawyer
David Matas, the report claims there is a widespread and systematic policy in
China of selling organs from living donors to a growing clientele of desperate
patients.
Mr. Kilgour said yesterday it is clear Falun Gong members are being targeted
over other ethnic groups and religions, as a part of a campaign to vilify their
spiritual practice since it fell out of favor with the government in 2000.
The report's conclusions were drawn from interviews with a handful of
eyewitnesses from the medical side, recipients of organs harvested in China,
official government pronouncements, statistics showing a sudden explosion in the
number of transplants performed, marketing websites and undercover inquiries to
hospitals.
In one instance, an Asian patient recounted that after rifling through a list of
potential donors, a military doctor departed and returned to the hospital
several times, bringing back a total of eight different kidneys before finally
settling on a match.
In another, a sick patient found out one day he needed a transplant and had an
organ within 24 hours.
Websites market transplants in China in five languages and in some cases
guarantee availability of a matching organ within two weeks. The average wait
time for a kidney in Canada is 32.5 months, while in British Columbia it is 52.5
months.
In surreptitious phone calls to Chinese transplant hospitals by
Mandarin-speaking investigators, medical staff admitted organs came from Falun
Gong prisoners.
While he is sympathetic to the plight of ailing Canadians who wait years for a
transplant and face the prospect of dying before a match comes along, Mr.
Kilgour said patients and doctors cannot turn a blind eye.
"Medicine cannot be practiced by killing innocent people like
chickens," he said.
Gerry Koffman, a Toronto general practitioner and member of Doctors Against
Organ Harvesting, said there are about 100 confirmed cases of Canadian patients
from Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver having transplants done in China.
One kidney specialist told him about a patient with end-stage renal failure
quietly disappearing for several weeks, then returning to sheepishly seek
after-care for his "second" organ. When his body rejected the first,
Chinese doctors quickly supplied him with a second, Dr. Koffman said.
The exposure of China's transplant industry, he added, should also be a wake-up
call to all Canadians to sign their donor cards so the sick aren't forced to
make such desperate choices.
"If more organs were available, there would be no need to become an organ
tourist," he said.