South Africa: Rationing by Committee

In South Africa, the government puts limits on life-sustaining kidney dialysis,and that puts medical professionals in a difficult position. They are tasked with deciding who lives and who dies.This is the story of two patients and the committee that determined their fates.

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In late August, Amos Phillips, 41, arrived by ambulance at Tygerberg Academic Hospital near Cape Town. His kidneys had failed. He was confused, struggling to breathe, and desperate enough to ask doctors to end his life.

Karen MacPherson, 43, was also treated at Tygerberg that month, and she desperately wanted to
live. A widow with three children, she said she had been plagued by high blood pressure, a risk factor for kidney disease, since her children’s birth. “It’s because of the high blood [pressure] the kidneys don’t want to work anymore,” she said.

More than 200 new patients a year seek treatment at Tygerberg Hospital for severe, chronic kidney
failure. The condition can come on suddenly and affect anyone.

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