Guayaquil consensus: financial neutrality in organ donation
In the context of projections for Latin America, the Guayaquil Document is expected to serve as a crucial reference framework for establishing policies that ensure financial neutrality in the region. As we move towards 2030, countries in the area will likely adopt stricter measures to ensure donors...
- Autores:
-
Vázquez-Jiménez, Lourdes C.
Matamoros, María A.
Mueller, Thomas
Bisignano, Liliana
Morales-Buenrostro, Luis E.
Rosa-Diez, Guillermo
Mizraji, Raúl
Rico-Fontalvo, Jorge
Dina-Battle, Eliana
Valdés, Régulo A.
Papaginovic, María M.
Ferreiro-Fuentes, Alejandro
Stanley, Idalina
Orué-Simón, María G.
Moura-Netto, José A.
Huertas, Jorge
Márquez, Carlos
Madrid-Mancia, Carlos F.
Arroyo, Rocío C.
Sandoval-Díaz, Mabel
Carlino, María C.
Avellán-Boza, Marta
Rodríguez-Méndez, Guillermo
Cáceres, Adhanellys
De la Cruz, Ana C.
Gómez-Luján, Martín
Cabrera, Sebastián
Bórquez-Villagra, Tamara
Castresana, Josué
Salomé, Mariela
Abbud-Filho, Mario
Sánchez-Cedillo, Aczel
García, Paola
Garcia-Trabanino, Ramon
Pregno, Elian
Sánchez-Polo, Vicente
- Tipo de recurso:
- Fecha de publicación:
- 2025
- Institución:
- Universidad Simón Bolívar
- Repositorio:
- Repositorio Digital USB
- Idioma:
- eng
- OAI Identifier:
- oai:bonga.unisimon.edu.co:20.500.12442/17339
- Acceso en línea:
- https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12442/17339
http://dx.doi.org/10.24875/NEFRO.M25000074
https://www.nefrologialatinoamericana.com/frame_eng.php?id=203
- Palabra clave:
- Altruistic donation
Istanbul declaration
Transplant ethics
Distributive justice
Protection of living donors
Sustainability of the transplant system
Donación altruista
Declaración de Estambul
Ética del trasplante
Justicia distributiva
Protección del donante vivo
Sostenibilidad del sistema de trasplantes
- Rights
- openAccess
- License
- http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
| Summary: | In the context of projections for Latin America, the Guayaquil Document is expected to serve as a crucial reference framework for establishing policies that ensure financial neutrality in the region. As we move towards 2030, countries in the area will likely adopt stricter measures to ensure donors do not incur economic losses from their altruistic decisions. Considering the recent legislative proposal from the United States—the End Kidney Deaths Act (H.R. 9275, 118th Congress)—which proposes a $50,000 tax deduction for living kidney donors ($10,000 annually for five years), the signing societies express their deep ethical, legal, and social concerns. Although the project states its purpose of reducing mortality from chronic kidney disease (CKD), its implementation sets a precedent that contradicts the universal principles of altruistic donation and financial neutrality enshrined in the Istanbul Declaration (2018) and the WHO Guiding Principles (2010). This document alerts health authorities, legislators, ethics committees, medical societies, and international organizations in Latin America and the Caribbean to the risks that such initiatives may pose to more fragile systems, eroding public trust and compromising distributive justice and human dignity. This document has been consensually agreed upon and approved by all nephrology societies in Latin America that comprise SLANH during the XXI Congress of SLANH, held in Guayaquil, Ecuador, from August 27 to 30, 2025. It has also been subscribed, discussed, consensually agreed upon, and approved by the transplant societies of Latin America and the Caribbean that form STALYC during the XXVI Latin American and Caribbean Transplant Congress and the V Paraguayan Transplant Congress, held in Asunción, Paraguay, from October 1 to 3, 2025. |
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