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Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit

The objective of the present article is to review moral assumptions underlying organ donation in the intensive care unit. Data sources used include personal experience, and a Medline search and a non-Medline search of relevant English-language literature. The study selection included articles concer...

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Autor principal: Streat, Stephen
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1065007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15469581
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc2876
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author Streat, Stephen
author_facet Streat, Stephen
author_sort Streat, Stephen
collection PubMed
description The objective of the present article is to review moral assumptions underlying organ donation in the intensive care unit. Data sources used include personal experience, and a Medline search and a non-Medline search of relevant English-language literature. The study selection included articles concerning organ donation. All data were extracted and analysed by the author. In terms of data synthesis, a rational, utilitarian moral perspective dominates, and has captured and circumscribed, the language and discourse of organ donation. Examples include "the problem is organ shortage", "moral or social duty or responsibility to donate", "moral responsibility to advocate for donation", "requesting organs" or "asking for organs", "trained requesters", "pro-donation support persons", "persuasion" and defining "maximising donor numbers" as the objective while impugning the moral validity of nonrational family objections to organ donation. Organ donation has recently been described by intensivists in a morally neutral way as an "option" that they should "offer", as "part of good end-of-life care", to families of appropriate patients. In conclusion, the review shows that a rational utilitarian framework does not adequately encompass interpersonal interactions during organ donation. A morally neutral position frees intensivists to ensure that clinical and interpersonal processes in organ donation are performed to exemplary standards, and should more robustly reflect societal acceptability of organ donation (although it may or may not "produce more donors").
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spelling pubmed-10650072005-03-16 Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit Streat, Stephen Crit Care Review The objective of the present article is to review moral assumptions underlying organ donation in the intensive care unit. Data sources used include personal experience, and a Medline search and a non-Medline search of relevant English-language literature. The study selection included articles concerning organ donation. All data were extracted and analysed by the author. In terms of data synthesis, a rational, utilitarian moral perspective dominates, and has captured and circumscribed, the language and discourse of organ donation. Examples include "the problem is organ shortage", "moral or social duty or responsibility to donate", "moral responsibility to advocate for donation", "requesting organs" or "asking for organs", "trained requesters", "pro-donation support persons", "persuasion" and defining "maximising donor numbers" as the objective while impugning the moral validity of nonrational family objections to organ donation. Organ donation has recently been described by intensivists in a morally neutral way as an "option" that they should "offer", as "part of good end-of-life care", to families of appropriate patients. In conclusion, the review shows that a rational utilitarian framework does not adequately encompass interpersonal interactions during organ donation. A morally neutral position frees intensivists to ensure that clinical and interpersonal processes in organ donation are performed to exemplary standards, and should more robustly reflect societal acceptability of organ donation (although it may or may not "produce more donors"). BioMed Central 2004 2004-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC1065007/ /pubmed/15469581 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc2876 Text en Copyright © 2004 BioMed Central Ltd
spellingShingle Review
Streat, Stephen
Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
title Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
title_full Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
title_fullStr Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
title_full_unstemmed Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
title_short Clinical review: Moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
title_sort clinical review: moral assumptions and the process of organ donation in the intensive care unit
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1065007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15469581
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc2876
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