Asking Awake ICU Patients to Harvest Organs
By Wesley J. Smith
Pick your cliche: Give them an inch and they will take a mile; in for a penny in for a pound, etc. In bioethics, there is never a permanent boundary beyond which the utilitarian impulse will not take them.
Now, advocacy is beginning to ask conscious patients who want to stop life-sustaining treatment for their organs. So far, this “non-heartbeating cadaver donor” process has only been done with the profoundly cognitively disabled.
But now, that line is under assault. From an article by Dutch ethicists–euthanasialand!_in Clinical Ethics (201 3 Volume 8 Number I):
“In a medical community in which
withdrawal of lifesustaining measures in unconscious and in conscious
ICU patients is accepted, where organ donation after death is common
practice, and in which there is a shortage of organs for
transplantation, there can be no moral objection to ask certain
conscious ICU patients to donate their organs after death.
“Although withdrawal of mechanical
ventilation on request of the patient on the ICU is rare and therefore
the number of organs that come available is limited, it is still well
worth considering. We argue that there are no valid moral and legal
objections against it; it is ethically feasible and practically possible
to ask the patients for organ donation after death.”
Well, there is one: Letting society think that same thing.
Next stop: Asking suicidal people for their organs. It already happens in Belgium euthanasia.
Source: NRLC News
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