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The Morning: Donated organs -

11-13 minutes

The Morning

February 27, 2025



Good morning. Today, my colleague Brian Rosenthal explains a problem with organ transplants in the U.S. We’re also covering minerals, foreign aid and Gene Hackman.

A person wearing scrubs moves a box labeled "perishable" down a hallway facing away from the camera.
Readying a liver for transport. Bryan Denton for The New York Times

Skipping the list

Who gets the kidneys and livers and hearts donated by people who die? For decades, the U.S. government has enforced strict rules — devised by doctors and ethicists — to ensure they go to the patients who need them the most. The system is supposed to be fair.

Increasingly, it is not. Doctors in the United States transplant more than 40,000 organs from deceased donors per year — the most in the world. And in more and more cases, officials skip patients at the top of waiting lists and send organs to people who are not as sick and have not been waiting as long. Those recipients are disproportionately white and better educated.

A chart shows the annual share of organs allocated out of sequence by each organ procurement organization since 2010, along with the national rate, which has increased from 1 percent in 2010 to 19 percent in 2024.
Source: Based on Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network data as of Jan. 17. | By Jeremy White

Last year, this happened nearly 20 percent of the time — six times as often as in 2020. Some people never got a transplant and ended up dying. I’ve been working with a team of Times journalists to uncover the problem, and our story was just published.

In today’s newsletter, I’ll explain why people at the front of the line don’t always receive the transplants they need.

‘Making a mockery’

More than 100,000 people in the United States are waiting for a transplant. But they don’t all appear on one list. Instead, a new list is created for each organ that becomes available — about 200 a day.

Here’s how it works: Every state has at least one nonprofit that recovers organs and uses algorithms to rank all potential recipients across the country. Priority goes to patients who are sicker, have been waiting longer and are nearby.

The nonprofits are supposed to follow the lists when they offer organs. But this can take time. A recipient’s doctor can decline an offer for a number of reasons — the lungs might be too big, the donor too old, the patient too far from the hospital. Meanwhile, the clock is ticking; organs last only so long outside the body.

A person in blue surgical gear and medical gloves cuts open a container holding a kidney.
A donated kidney. Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times

So, sometimes, officials make exceptions: If an organ is at risk of becoming unusable, they ignore the rankings and simply pick a hospital to take the organ, ensuring that the donation doesn’t go to waste. For decades, this happened about 2 percent of the time.

But in 2020, government regulators began pressuring the nonprofits to throw away fewer organs. In a scramble to respond, the organizations began skipping patients far more often.

The nonprofits describe a tension between what they’re supposed to do (place as many organs as possible) and what hospitals often do (reject organs they deem a mismatch for the patient). The head of the nonprofits’ trade group told us that skipping was a necessary, if imperfect, solution. They say they ignore the lists to save lives and place organs that may otherwise spoil.

But our reporting found that they regularly do it — even with higher-quality organs that still have plenty of time. We found that they bypass patients because it’s easier to steer organs to hospitals with which they have relationships.

Those hospitals have freedom to choose which of their patients receive the organs, regardless of their spot on the waiting lists. They have an incentive to choose healthier recipients because they are judged on how many patients survive after surgery.

People throughout the transplant network have become alarmed about these practices. “They are making a mockery of the allocation system,” said Dr. Sumit Mohan, a kidney specialist at Columbia University. “It’s shocking. And it’s going to destroy trust in the system.”

Who lives and who dies?

We analyzed more than 500,000 organ transplants since 2004 and found that ignoring the queue did not prevent waste. In fact, the rate of discarded organs has gone up.

A chart compares the rates of organ discard and out-of-sequence organ allocation since 2010. The rate of patients skipped has risen from 1 percent in 2010 to 19 percent in 2024. The organ discard rate has not decreased; rather, it has risen from 19 percent in 2010 to 22 percent in 2024.
Source: Based on Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network data as of Jan. 17. | By Jeremy White

And the practice means Black and Latino people are treated worse. When nonprofits and hospitals ignore the queue, transplants disproportionately go to white and Asian patients and people with college degrees, the data shows.

Over the past five years, more than 1,200 people died after they got close to the top of a waiting list but were skipped, we found. It is possible that their doctors would have decided that the organ wasn’t a good fit for them, but they never got a chance to find out.

Patients rarely learn that they’ve been skipped. They just don’t get the call that can mean the difference between life and death.


THE LATEST NEWS

Cabinet Meeting

A large table with people sitting next to Donald Trump. Elon Musk standing in the background.
At the White House. Doug Mills/The New York Times

More on the Trump Administration

More on Politics

The view of a green lake with barges on top from above.
The Chaerhan Salt Lake in Golmud, China, an area rich in lithium and other minerals. Qilai Shen for The New York Times

Climate

Middle East

More International News

People praying near a saffron-dressed man with a tray that bears a ritual flame and cash donations.
At the Maha Kumbh Mela. Atul Loke for The New York Times

Business

  • The Washington Post’s opinion editor resigned after Jeff Bezos, the paper’s owner, directed the section to advocate “personal liberties and free markets” without publishing opposing views.
  • Amazon announced that Alexa, its virtual assistant, would now be powered with generative A.I.

Other Big Stories

Gene Hackman in 1993, holding his best supporting actor Oscar.
Gene Hackman Associated Press
  • Gene Hackman — Hollywood’s consummate Everyman, who starred in some of the most noted films of the 1970s and ’80s — died at 95. He was found dead in his New Mexico home alongside his wife, Betsy Arakawa, 64, and their dog. The local authorities said they did not suspect foul play.
  • An unvaccinated child died of measles in West Texas. The disease is spreading there and in New Mexico.

Opinions

Support for traditional gender roles is increasing, Michael Tesler, John Sides and Colette Marcellin write.

Here are columns by Jamelle Bouie on Musk and Carlos Lozada on Trump and common sense.

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MORNING READS

A woman with loose curls and a light olive trench coat, and another with a lace collar and a long, quilted floral gilet.
Simbarashe Cha/The New York Times

Head-turning fashion: Our photographer found the coolest looks on and off the runways at London Fashion Week.

Humanity: When this professor got cancer, he didn’t quit. He taught a class about it.

Social Q’s: “My mother-in-law wants to be in the delivery room with me. Help!”

Most clicked yesterday: For the second day in a row, a fake, graphic video of Trump and Musk was our most clicked link.

Lives Lived: The Haitian artist and writer known as Frankétienne published the first novel written entirely in Haitian Creole and was the nation’s foremost literary figure. He died at 88.


SPORTS

N.B.A.: Shaedon Sharpe may have had the dunk of the year, ESPN writes. See it here.

Soccer: Japan beat the U.S. women’s national team in an upset at the SheBelieves Cup.

N.F.L.: The Giants and Raiders have emerged as serious contenders to trade for the Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford.


ARTS AND IDEAS

President Biden disembarks from Air Force One.
Joe Biden Eric Lee/The New York Times

Last weekend, a group of history professors gathered at Princeton University to evaluate Biden’s presidency. They asked broad questions: How much do intentions versus concrete achievements matter? How do you weight a policy record against the backlash it generated? Read about their efforts.

More on culture

A woman in a sequin dress looks to the left of a camera.
Michelle Trachtenberg Michael Tran/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

Kate Sears for The New York Times

Make a simple, five-ingredient yogurt cake.

Hydrate this Ramadan with a homemade lassi.

Run at night with a headlamp.


GAMES

Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangram was moonwalk.

And here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

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