Non-Heart-Beating Organ Donation: A Defense of the Required Determination of Death

Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (2):126-136 (1999)
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Abstract

The family of a patient who is unconscious and respirator-dependent has made a decision to discontinue medical treatment. The patient had signed a donor card. The family wants to respect this decision, and agrees to non-heart-beating organ donation. Consequently, as the patient is weaned from the ventilator, he is prepped for organ explantation. Two minutes after the patient goes into cardiac arrest, he is declared dead and the transplant team arrives to begin organ procurement. At the time retrieval begins, it is not certain that the patient's brain is dead or that cardiac function cannot be restored. Procurement follows uneventfully, and two transplantable kidneys are retrieved.Many people now consider such cases of non-heart-beating organ donation to be ethically permissible. However, widespread disagreement persists as to how such practices are to be justified and whether such practices are compatible with the Uniform Declaration of Death Act. In this paper, I argue that non-heart-beating organ donation can be ethically justified, that in the justified cases the patients are in fact dead, and that the early declarations of death required for such donation do comply with the UDDA.

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Citations of this work

The Ethics of Creating and Responding to Doubts about Death Criteria.James M. Dubois - 2010 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (3):365-380.
Death Revisited: Rethinking Death and the Dead Donor Rule.A. S. Iltis & M. J. Cherry - 2010 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (3):223-241.
The Metaphysical Irreversibility of Death.Catherine Nolan - 2020 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 45 (6):725-741.
Defining death in non-heart beating organ donors.N. Zamperetti - 2003 - Journal of Medical Ethics 29 (3):182-185.

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References found in this work

Defining Death.William Charlton - 2022 - New Blackfriars 103 (1107):607-621.
Doubts about Death: The Silence of the Institute of Medicine.Jerry Menikoff - 1998 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 26 (2):157-165.

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