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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Health Law and Policy
Frozen Ethics: Melting The Boundaries Between Medical Treatment And Organ Procurement, George J. Annas, Michael A. Grodin
Frozen Ethics: Melting The Boundaries Between Medical Treatment And Organ Procurement, George J. Annas, Michael A. Grodin
Faculty Scholarship
When Renee Fox, medical sociologist and noted historian of organ transplantation, first learned of the proposal to use "non-heart-beating cadavers" as organ sources more than 25 years ago, she was appalled. She labeled the proposal "the most elaborately macabre scheme for obtaining organs that I have encountered," adding that "it borders on ghoulishness." She saw the procedure as "beyond the pale of the medically decent, morally allowable, and spiritually acceptable" (Fox 1993, 232). But medically decent has seldom gotten in the way of procuring organs for transplant, and we now seem to be on the verge of adopting an "uncontrolled" …
You Get What You Pay For?: Rethinking U.S. Organ Procurement Policy In Light Of Foreign Models, J. Andrew Hughes
You Get What You Pay For?: Rethinking U.S. Organ Procurement Policy In Light Of Foreign Models, J. Andrew Hughes
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
The U.S. organ transplant system is in crisis due to the paucity of transplantable organs. Such a shortage exists because otherwise viable organs are too often buried along with the bodies in which they reside. Organs are wasted because the existing U.S. organ transplant system sets up barriers to organ donation--chiefly the legal presumption of unwillingness to donate ("voluntary donation') and the National Organ Transplant Act's ban on the transfer of organs for valuable consideration. This Note surveys the qualified successes of Austria, Belgium, Brazil, and France with their various "presumed consent" models of organ procurement. It also considers other …
The Case Against Tax Incentives For Organ Transfers, Lisa Milot
The Case Against Tax Incentives For Organ Transfers, Lisa Milot
Scholarly Works
Each year some 6,700 Americans die while awaiting an organ transplant. On its face, this fact seems almost inconsequential, representing less than 3% of American deaths annually. However, for the nearly 100,000 patients on the transplant wait list (and their families), nothing could be more consequential. What is more, the demand for transplantable organs is sure to rise as (1) more diseases become subject to prevention or cure, making organ failure the first sign of medical problems; (2) the success rate for transplants increases, leading to wider use; and (3) barriers to inclusion on the wait list are removed.
In …
Update - July 1996, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update - July 1996, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update
In this issue:
-- Stress and Distress in Pediatric Nurses: The Hidden Tragedy of Baby K
-- Ethics Grand Rounds: The Year in Review
-- CEJA Reverses Its Stance on Using Anencephalic Neonates as Live Organ Donors
-- AMA Council's Ethics Overwhelmed by Public Sentiment
Update - October 1995, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update - October 1995, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update
In this issue:
-- Managed Care: Challenges Facing Interdisciplinary Health Care Teams
-- Anencephalic Neonates as Live Organ Donors: AMA and CEJA
-- Can Evil Even End?
Regulating Heart And Liver Transplantation, George J. Annas
Regulating Heart And Liver Transplantation, George J. Annas
Faculty Scholarship
Organ transplantation has been a favorite topic of health lawyers since its inception. Organ procurement was addressed with the adoption of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act in all fifty states, and "brain death" has been recognized both judicially and legislatively across the United States. Nonetheless, it is now apparent that the major problems in organ transplantation are not legal in nature, and thus neither are the solutions. Heart and liver transplants are extreme and expensive medical interventions that few individuals can afford and few hospitals can offer. In an era of economic scarcity, how (if at all) should organ transplant …