I'm just looking for some opinions here prior to writing a longer analysis - feel free to chime in with your thoughts no matter your background! I'm at least as interested in the diversity of opinion as finding the best answer.
Question:
EAs who are into global health often compare proposed interventions to GiveWell's cost per life saved via Against Malaria Foundation ($4,500/life saved).
In the USA, dialysis and kidney transplants are both funded by the US government, and they are both very expensive. Kidney transplants are typically considered less expensive overall and lead to longer, healthier lives. The bottleneck is the supply of kidneys for transplant. One possible intervention is for a nonprofit advocacy group to focus on shifting the medical establishment to view payment for kidneys as an ethical option (I have much to say on this subject, but that's for another post).
If EA managed to effect this change, would we consider the QALYs/lives saved as being effectively "free," less the cost of operating the advocacy group, since the US government is already footing the bill of this form of medical care, and the cost of transplants + paying for kidney is likely to be cheaper than the cost of dialysis?
Right now, I estimate that if there was an unlimited supply of ethically sourced vended organs, perhaps 10,000 lives could be saved per year. If a charity could accomplish this on less than $45 million/year, then that would be on par with Against Malaria Foundation. This is what's motivating me to investigate this question, but I want to know what other EAs think about how to parse the cost-effectiveness question.
Thanks for your input!
Thanks for your thoughts!
I agree that more refined metrics would allow a better comparison between deaths from malaria in Africa and deaths from kidney disease in America.
A typical story for the latter is “a Black man close to retirement suddenly develops the symptoms of end-stage kidney disease and is put on dialysis. If he receives a kidney, he lives until his late 70s-early 80s in health comparable to if he hadn’t experienced kidney failure. If not, he declines and dies a few years later.” Kidney transplants typically give about 15 years of extra life but only about a handful of extra QALYs compared to dialysis IIRC, and they are cheaper per QALY.
The tricky part is that GiveWell used their own idiosyncratic in-house version of “moral weights” to evaluate their charities, which precludes comparison using QALYs. Since some people do argue that “lives saved” is an appropriate way to compare interventions and critique QALYs/DALYs as ableist, I think it’s a relevant but not conclusive comparison.
You’re right to point out the carousel of ill-thought-out moral and practical objections to kidney sales that would have to be overcome (or put on firmer epistemic footing). Note that I don’t mean that all of these objections are wrong - just that their supporters have usually put in minimal real thought or research into them and tend to use them to justify a fundamentally emotional reaction. Janet Radcliffe Richards’ book “The Ethics of Transplants” is a great resource on this point (she’s an Oxford moral philosopher and EA). Overcoming with this feeling of repugnance - less widespread than you might think - to effect policy change is the main goal of the altruistic work I would be proposing.