Because he must completely end his life, human beings are born perfectly. No one on Earth can buy a life. But people are purchasing parts of human life. It leads people to live in an unfinished body. In general, much of the modern world is reluctant to legalize the sale of human organs, even if it is part of human death (Mill, 2009). In addition, the sale of organs is primarily a violation of the moral values of some religions like Muslim. However, in the modern world, the increase in organ transplant is affected by lack of organ supply.
Of course, a doctor who is hampered by inadequate organ supply, and a patient who urgently needs transplantation will support legalizing the sale of human organs. Supporters of this approach believe that some people who dislikes donating organs are willing to sell them for economic incentives so legalization will limit the number of organs available for transplantation We claim to increase. Supporters also believe that other people will continue donating, but can society judge that economic incentives do not lead to a reduction in donation? In a comprehensive study comparing the blood supply in the United States and the UK, R. M .. Titmuss (1973) reached a cool conclusion. From 1946 to 1968, when blood donation in the UK was prohibited, the proportion of people who donated blood and the amount of blood donation increased. In the United States, donations decreased during the same period when blood sales were legal.
The retailing of human organs and the cultivation of human organs is a matter of whether or not human organs should be considered for the goods sold on the market (whether legitimate or not) and for the clear purpose of harvesting It continues to raise moral issues on that degree. Stem cell research in the 21st century is doing its best, and over time it is possible to theoretically produce every part of the human body from one cell of the human body. As these prospects become reality many of the ethical issues raised by procurement and human organ transplants will be meaningless.
In the United States, the sale of organs became illegal by the National Organ Transplant Law of 1984. In the UK, the Human Organ Transplant Law in 1989 initially made organ sales illegal, replaced by the 2004 Human Organization Act. In 2007, two major European conferences recommended not to sell organs. The development of personal advertisements of recent organ sites and candidates raised the risk of organ sales, caused a targeted donation, "good Samaritan" donation, and a major moral debate about the current US organ distribution . Policy bioethologist Jacob M. Appel believes that collection of organs on billboards and the Internet may actually increase the overall supply of organs.