Under the opt out system, if you die in circumstances where you could become a donor and have not recorded a donation decision, it may be assumed you are willing to donate your organs and tissue for transplantation.
Your family will always be asked about your latest views on donation, to ensure it would not proceed if this was against your wishes. — NHS Scotland
( 2 ) Opt out organ harvesting is ethical. — fdrake
The person's body and the organs therein are no one's property to "harvest" after death. As much would imply the person's body is the property of the state, and it is simply for the duration that the person's soul occupies the body that it is lended to the person. — Tzeentch
( 10 ) A violation of bodily autonomy would only occur if a person's articulated preferences were neglected. — fdrake
1. Whenever a person dies, he/she loses her/his civil personality and then he/she lacks his/her own right to claim.[ * (Yet, an authority represented by their interests can take decision on order to complement someone's interests)
2. Public order must prevail over private. A judge must decide and authorize an organ donation if the health and life of others is at risk, even if the donor had not expressed his agreement or disagreement while alive. — javi2541997
However, the consent requirements for organ donation are extremely loose, in comparison with consents required for other forms of medical intervention. Recent legislative changes in the UK, for example, mean that a person’s organs may be harvested without any clear indication that they wished for this to happen. Should we expect something more demanding than this, if we include WBGD among the uses of a person’s body after their (brain) death? If so, why, given that we accept such minimal requirements for ‘normal’ organ donation? Perhaps one answer here is that WBGD is not something that people understand or have knowledge of. Therefore ‘deemed consent’ such as the organ donation framework relies on, is not properly informed. People who fail to opt out of the organ donation system can be regarded as having passively consented to something they have sufficient knowledge about. Everyone has heard of organ donation. No-one has heard of WBGD. Moreover, WBGD is qualitatively different in that it entails ventilation over an extended period. And, of course, its aim is not ‘life-saving’ per se as organ donation is usually understood to be.
if the health and life of others is at risk — javi2541997
Unlike any other form of organ donation, WBGD imposes no risks on the ‘recipient’. It has the additional advantage of conveying significant clinical benefits on women who make use of it. If WBGD were offered as an alternative to pregnancy generally, the clinical benefits would be striking. It is here that I diverge most significantly from Ber. Ber argues that only the neediest of claimants should have access to WBGD – those who have clear medical contra-indications to pregnancy or lack a uterus altogether. The problem with this is that pregnancy itself should properly speaking be medically contra-indicated for women generally.
It is well known that pregnancy and childbirth carry significant health risks, even in affluent settings with sophisticated healthcare systems [26, 27]. To expose oneself to risks comparable to pregnancy and childbirth would be deemed foolish and pathological in any other context. I have previously shown that in a comparison between pregnancy and measles, pregnancy comes out considerably the worse in terms of morbidity and mortality [28]. Yet concerted medical efforts are focussed on ridding ourselves of measles, while women are expected to submit themselves to the greater risks of pregnancy and childbirth almost without thinking about it.
My initial problem is with the word 'harvesting'. The citizenry as a crop; the government as reaper. There is something very skewed about that concept, even before the ethics of the situation - properly called dismemberment of dead bodies.
The ethical consideration rests on one question:
Is leaving one's body to the nation an articulated condition of citizenship? — Vera Mont
what is the ethical distinction when both are harm reducers and life enablers? How would this distinction block the concluded entailment? — fdrake
if you grant that opt out organ harvesting is unethical, — fdrake
But the treatment as an object, or consumer item, whose possession is to be legally decided presupposed its status as property. It is presumed the property of the occupant as long as he's in possession; his to leave in a will, like anything else he owns. There is nothing either ethical or religious about that: it's a thing that can be argued over, arbitrated, cut up, portioned out and used.Otherwise, interpreting our bodies as property it looks like a religious belief rather than ethical one... — javi2541997
But the treatment as an object, or consumer item, whose possession is to be legally decided presupposed its status as property. It is presumed the property of the occupant as long as he's in possession; his to leave in a will, like anything else he owns. There is nothing either ethical or religious about that: it's a thing that can be argued over, arbitrated, cut up, portioned out and used.
The only question here, who has a right to decide how it will be used, absent the owner's explicit instruction. — Vera Mont
If it is consider as one’s possession with the status as property, why suicide is condemned by both religion and laws? — javi2541997
How is the public order affected by someone giving or not giving up their corpse for dissection? In fact, the awareness of potential transplantation is far more likely to cause law-breaking than the lack of that possibility. You get sick; your organs fail; you die; the state continues on without missing a beat.In the other hand, I still think that the only third part capable of deciding on other someone’s interests can be the judges. As I said, each of us have a lot of private interests but the public order is over to self care. — javi2541997
It should be noted that if one's body is made property of the state, that "state" is in fact only a surrogate term for a collection of (usually highly corrupt) individuals who hold power. In other words, one's body becomes the property of other individuals - slavery. — Tzeentch
To some degree, that has always been the case. ... — Vera Mont
But the present question concerns power over dead bodies, ... — Vera Mont
Have at it! — fdrake
How do brain-dead human beings become the exclusive and legitimate holdings of this organization? — NOS4A2
Those organizations (supposedly) are there to help others or preserve nursing and caring. If they are aware of someone who dies and their organs can help others, they can ask a judge to authorize organ donation on behalf of that person to preserve the health and life of others.
In a similar vein, would you feel differently about this if the organs were used for cosmetic surgery rather than surgery that is medically necessary. — T Clark
( 11 ) Harms to the living derive from the denial of bodily autonomy.
One might argue that WBGD involving brain-dead women has no implications for living women, any more than harvesting the heart from a brain-dead man has an impact on living men. However, perhaps this is disingenuous. WBGD necessarily involves the separation of women’s reproductive functions from their very consciousness. Even if no-one would suggest that this should alter the way we regard ordinary women and their pregnancies, it might send an implicit message, or reinforcement to deeply entrenched assumptions and prejudices. The prospect of the unconscious woman’s body, filled and used by others as a vessel, is a vivid illustration of just what feminists have fought against for many years.
These feminist concerns, however, might be mitigated if men could also participate in WBGD. The prospect of male pregnancy is not, as many would imagine, fanciful, or a piece of science fiction. In 1999, Robert Winston told reporters that there were no intrinsic medical problems with initiating a male pregnancy: the danger would be in the delivery. We already know that pregnancies can come to term outside the uterus [31]. The liver is a promising implantation site, because of its excellent blood supply. However, as Winston noted, this could be risky – even fatal - for the person carrying the pregnancy. But for brain-dead donors, the concept ‘fatal’ is meaningless: the gestator is already dead. Thus, even if the liver is damaged beyond repair after the gestation, this would not pose a problem except insofar as it might mean that male gestators could carry only one pregnancy, rather than many consecutive ones.
The prospect of the male gestator could thus appease some feminists who might otherwise feel that brain-dead gestation is a step too far in the objectification of women’s reproductive functions.
But the law is not enacted to solve ethical issues but to reach equity. That's why I see it is fine if a judge needs to make a decision because we consider judges and courts as third parts who resolve problems of the societies and they interpret what should be someone's wishes if the interests of a person is at risk. — javi2541997
Am I right in thinking you're suggesting that because these decisions are made by judges and laws, a dead person's articulated informed consent is not required? — fdrake
The law is a result of legislation within a constitutional framework, which is based on stated moral principles. Every new law is assessed by a series of legal entities for concordance with those constituted principles. Jurists themselves swear to uphold a code of ethics when administering the law. So, when a judgment in law is carried out, it's done within those stated ethical standards.But the law is not enacted to solve ethical issues but to reach equity. That's why I see it is fine if a judge needs to make a decision because we consider judges and courts as third parts who resolve problems of the societies and they interpret what should be someone's wishes if the interests of a person is at risk. — javi2541997
Only it's not interpretation in these cases; it's arbitration. If person whose religion professes the sanctity of the body died without knowing that he could be parcelled out like bushels of wheat, because he did not explicitly forbid it in writing, his interest would be violated by the harvesting policy. If the judge ruled in the favour of the dead man, several patients waiting for his organs would be at risk. Their interest can only be served by denying his interest.they interpret what should be someone's wishes if the interests of a person is at risk
One of the main debates is to consider if a third person can decide on someone's interests when such individual is no longer available to do it by himself. — javi2541997
1. Is this clause generally known by the population as part of their civic obligation? I.e. is it explicitly articulated in law? — Vera Mont
Having taken possession of the body for harvesting, does the state undertake the responsibility for dignified disposal of whatever is left? Or, having appropriated the useful bits, does it download that effort and expense on the family? — Vera Mont
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