The ethical significance of consent to postmortem organ retrieval

Article indépendant

LUKOW, Pawel

Supporters of opt-in organ procurement policies typically claim that the absence of consent to postmortem transplantable organ retrieval is a normative barrier to such retrieval. On this ground, justification of opt-out policies is demanded. The paper shows that postmortem organ retrieval is normatively different from live organ removal, and so the doctrine of informed consent does not apply to it in the way it does in other types of cases. First, seen as the instrument of protection of autonomy or the right to self-determination, informed consent cannot be relied on in the case of dead persons; secondly, viewed as an instrument of annulment of harm or wrong to the dead (volenti non fit injuria), informed consent relies on indefensible accounts of posthumous harm or wrong. Postmortem organ retrieval in cases of absence of the decedent's consent and refusal is governed by other norms than those related to consent. Such norms include, among others, respectful treatment of human remains (such as those found in regulations of medicine, law enforcement, and research) and avoidance of inherently wrong contexts and purposes (such as killing for the purpose of organ retrieval or trade in the human body or its parts). It is concluded that the onus probandi is on the supporters of opt-in, rather than opt-out, policies of posthumous organ retrieval.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bioe.13161

Voir la revue «Bioethics, 37»

Autres numéros de la revue «Bioethics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The ethical significance of consent to postmo...

Article indépendant | LUKOW, Pawel | Bioethics | n°5 | vol.37

Supporters of opt-in organ procurement policies typically claim that the absence of consent to postmortem transplantable organ retrieval is a normative barrier to such retrieval. On this ground, justification of opt-out policies i...

De la même série

Care of the older person and the value of hum...

Article indépendant | PAGEAU, Félix | Bioethics | n°1 | vol.38

As the world population is rapidly aging, stakeholders must address the care of the elderly with great concern. Also, loss of dignity is often associated with aging due to dementia, mobility problems and diminished functional auto...

The ethical significance of consent to postmo...

Article indépendant | LUKOW, Pawel | Bioethics | n°5 | vol.37

Supporters of opt-in organ procurement policies typically claim that the absence of consent to postmortem transplantable organ retrieval is a normative barrier to such retrieval. On this ground, justification of opt-out policies i...

Death-row organ donation, revisited

Article indépendant | HANSMAN, Laura | Bioethics | n°6 | vol.37

In 2011, bioethicists turned their attention to the question of whether prisoners on death row ought to be allowed to be organ donors. The discussion began with a provocative anti-procurement article by Arthur Caplan and prompted ...

What if a friend asks me to assist their suic...

Article indépendant | COWLEY, Christopher | Bioethics | n°2 | vol.36

There has been plenty of philosophical discussion about the morality and/or rationality of suicide and physician-assisted suicide. There has also been plenty of discussion about non-prosecution policies (such as the British DPP 20...

The theoretical and practical arguments again...

Article indépendant | MALDONADO, Fabien | Bioethics | n°9 | vol.36

Some argue that it is ethically justifiable to unilaterally withdraw life-sustaining treatment during crisis standards of care without the patient's consent in order to reallocate it to another patient with a better chance of surv...

Chargement des enrichissements...