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Blood Money by Kathleen McLaughlin

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Blood Money

The Story of Life, Death, and Profit Inside America's Blood Industry

Kathleen McLaughlin

Atria/One Signal Publishers · Print & ebook · February 28, 2023

Reading lane: Pharma & Biotech Industry

A “haunting” (Anne Helen Petersen, author of Can’t Even ) and deeply personal investigation of an underground for-profit medical industry and the American underclass it drains for blood and profit.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Good for readers interested in memoirGood for readers who enjoy Pharma & Biotech Industry and Social Class.Strong fit for readers who prefer grounded, real-world context.

Book Details

Authors
Kathleen McLaughlin
Publisher
Atria/One Signal Publishers
Published
February 28, 2023
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Pharma & Biotech Industry · Social Class
Reading lane
Pharma & Biotech Industry

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Pharma & Biotech Industry

  • Social Class

  • White-Collar Crime

About This Book

A “haunting” (Anne Helen Petersen, author of Can’t Even ) and deeply personal investigation of an underground for-profit medical industry and the American underclass it drains for blood and profit. Journalist Kathleen McLaughlin knew she’d found a treatment that worked on her rare autoimmune disorder. She had no idea it had been drawn from the veins of America’s most vulnerable. So begins McLaughlin’s ten-year investigation researching and reporting on the $20-billion-a year...

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A “haunting” (Anne Helen Petersen, author of Can’t Even ) and deeply personal investigation of an underground for-profit medical industry and the American underclass it drains for blood and profit. Journalist Kathleen McLaughlin knew she’d found a treatment that worked on her rare autoimmune disorder. She had no idea it had been drawn from the veins of America’s most vulnerable. So begins McLaughlin’s ten-year investigation researching and reporting on the $20-billion-a year business she found at the other end of her medication, revealing an industry that targets America’s most economically vulnerable for immense profit. Assigned to work in China, McLaughlin hesitated to utilize that country’s scandal-plagued plasma supply—outbreaks throughout the 1990s and early 2000s struck thousands with blood-borne diseases as impoverished areas of the country were milked for blood with reckless abandon. Instead, McLaughlin becomes her own runner, hiding American plasma in her luggage during trips from the United States to China. She finishes the job, but never could get the plasma story out of her head. Suspicions become certainties when a source from the past, a visiting Chinese researcher, warns McLaughlin of troubling echoes between America’s domestic plasma supply chain and the one she’d seen spin out into chaos in China. Blood Money shares McLaughlin’s decade-long mission to learn the full story of where her medicine comes from. She travels the United States in search of the truth about human blood plasma and learns that twenty million Americans each year sell their plasma for profit—a human-derived commodity extracted inside our borders to be processed and packaged for retail across the globe. She investigates the thin evidence pharmaceutical companies have used to push plasma as a wonder drug for everything from COVID-19 to wrinkled skin. And she unearths an American economic crisis hidden in plain sight: single mothers, college students, laid-off Rust Belt auto workers, and a booming blood market at America’s southern border, where collection agencies target Mexican citizens willing to cross over and sell their plasma for substandard pay. McLaughlin’s findings push her to ask difficult questions about her own complicity in this wheel of exploitation, as both a patient in need and a customer who stands to benefit from the suffering of others. Blood Money weaves together McLaughlin’s personal battle to overcome illness as a working American with an electrifying exposé of capitalism run amok in a searing portrait that shows what happens when big business is allowed to feed unchecked on those least empowered to fight back.

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