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Despite Colorado's donation-friendly environment, organ donation advocates say the state still doesn't have enough donors to meet demand.
"After people pass away, there's a way to save nine lives, 10 lives with organ and tissue donations," said Steve Farber, a Denver attorney who received a kidney transplant from his son and co-wrote "On the List: Fixing America's Failing Organ Transplant System."
Farber, who founded the American Transplant Foundation, hasn't yet taken a position on Colorado's opt-out proposal. Even if Colorado raises organ and tissue donations through an opt-out system, there would still be a shortage because medical demand far outpaces supply, he said.
Arthur Caplan, of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Bioethics, agreed that waiting lists aren't going away.
"The demand for organs is growing so fast that even if we do this, we're not going to meet the shortage," said Caplan, one of the nation's most prominent supporters of opt-out donation programs.
He had some advice for Colorado lawmakers supporting the change: Replace the "presumed consent" title on the bill with a better-sounding "default to donation." Caplan says the phrase "presumed consent" sounds Orwellian to some.
"When you use the word 'presumed' it sounds like you're just going to take the organ, and that doesn't sound good," said Caplan, who last year argued in favor of New York's failed attempt at presumed consent.
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Online:
Senate Bill 42: http://goo.gl/MlKSw
[Associated
Press;
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