Death in the Eyes of the Beholder

The US Uniform Determination of Death Act provides two alternatives for determining death—the circulatorycriteria and the neurological criteria—yet history and the public’s current understanding of death in the US may mean that only brain death criteria can be relied upon without raising public susp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. Fry-Revere, B. Bastani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2010-04-01
Series:International Journal of Organ Transplantation Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://home.sums.ac.ir/~habibzaf/ojs/index.php/IJOTM/article/view/29/44
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spelling doaj-d0e0dc37813e43f795421fc6c40280b92020-11-24T21:56:52ZengShiraz University of Medical SciencesInternational Journal of Organ Transplantation Medicine2008-64902008-64822010-04-01129497Death in the Eyes of the BeholderS. Fry-RevereB. BastaniThe US Uniform Determination of Death Act provides two alternatives for determining death—the circulatorycriteria and the neurological criteria—yet history and the public’s current understanding of death in the US may mean that only brain death criteria can be relied upon without raising public suspicion that the medical profession is sacrificing the well-being of one group of patients (i.e., those dying after traumatic injury) to save another group (i.e., those in need of organs). The problem is exacerbated by existing debate on the appropriate waiting time after which death is inevitable and when the brain should be actually considereddead through prolonged absence of autoresuscitation. Given the difficulty of definitive determinationof the time when brain function has ceased, two solutions are proposed: abandon the Dead Donor Rule or redefine death. Implementing the former would mean convincing the public to accept organ harvesting before the dying patient is completely brain dead through the writing of advance directives to permit organ harvest when death is inevitable though not confirmed. For the latter, reeducation would be necessary to persuade the public to accept the circulatory criteria for death as an independent determinant for death or the medical community would need to reconsider if the cessation of higher brain function is enough to be the basis for determining death. In conclusion, organ retrieval policies, no matter how medically sound, should seek to avoid the possibility of a public backlash that could result in fewer organs available for transplant.http://home.sums.ac.ir/~habibzaf/ojs/index.php/IJOTM/article/view/29/44Tissue and organ procurementDeathBrain deathElectroencephalographyOrgan transplantation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Fry-Revere
B. Bastani
spellingShingle S. Fry-Revere
B. Bastani
Death in the Eyes of the Beholder
International Journal of Organ Transplantation Medicine
Tissue and organ procurement
Death
Brain death
Electroencephalography
Organ transplantation
author_facet S. Fry-Revere
B. Bastani
author_sort S. Fry-Revere
title Death in the Eyes of the Beholder
title_short Death in the Eyes of the Beholder
title_full Death in the Eyes of the Beholder
title_fullStr Death in the Eyes of the Beholder
title_full_unstemmed Death in the Eyes of the Beholder
title_sort death in the eyes of the beholder
publisher Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
series International Journal of Organ Transplantation Medicine
issn 2008-6490
2008-6482
publishDate 2010-04-01
description The US Uniform Determination of Death Act provides two alternatives for determining death—the circulatorycriteria and the neurological criteria—yet history and the public’s current understanding of death in the US may mean that only brain death criteria can be relied upon without raising public suspicion that the medical profession is sacrificing the well-being of one group of patients (i.e., those dying after traumatic injury) to save another group (i.e., those in need of organs). The problem is exacerbated by existing debate on the appropriate waiting time after which death is inevitable and when the brain should be actually considereddead through prolonged absence of autoresuscitation. Given the difficulty of definitive determinationof the time when brain function has ceased, two solutions are proposed: abandon the Dead Donor Rule or redefine death. Implementing the former would mean convincing the public to accept organ harvesting before the dying patient is completely brain dead through the writing of advance directives to permit organ harvest when death is inevitable though not confirmed. For the latter, reeducation would be necessary to persuade the public to accept the circulatory criteria for death as an independent determinant for death or the medical community would need to reconsider if the cessation of higher brain function is enough to be the basis for determining death. In conclusion, organ retrieval policies, no matter how medically sound, should seek to avoid the possibility of a public backlash that could result in fewer organs available for transplant.
topic Tissue and organ procurement
Death
Brain death
Electroencephalography
Organ transplantation
url http://home.sums.ac.ir/~habibzaf/ojs/index.php/IJOTM/article/view/29/44
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