1. Organ donation after cardiac death increases organ availability, but raises several legal and ethical issues, including consent. 2. Medical interventions for people who are unconscious usually require guardian consent and must meet patients’ best-interests standards. 3. Antemortem procedures can improve the success of organ transplant after cardiac death, but do not serve the patient’s medical interests, and it is contentious whether consent for antemortem interventions is legal under current Australian guardianship legislation. 4. We argue that consent decisions should take patients’ wishes as well as their medical interests into account. 5. Antemortem interventions are ethically and legally justified if the interventions are not harmfu...
Rules about consent to organ donation are being reviewed in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. In l...
In the past, a vast majority of medical assistance in dying (MAiD) patients were elderly patients wi...
Premortem interventions (PMIs) for organ donation play a vital role in preserving opportunities for ...
The document attached has been archived with permission from the editor of the Medical Journal of Au...
A range of interventions in dying patients can improve both the possibility of successful organ dona...
This article explores how the type of consent given for organ donation should affect the judgement o...
Abstract Organ donation after cessation of circulation and respiration, both controlled and uncontro...
Editor’s key points † The ethical aspects of consent to organ donation after death differ from those...
Many believe that the ethical problems of donation after cardiocirculatory death (DCD) have been "wo...
Euthanasia is controversial amongst healthcare professionals worldwide, but the number of countries ...
In an editorial by the ethics advisors of the British Medical Association, Hamm and Tizzard state th...
'Matters Arising' is a reply to editor letters for an article (titled 'Organ donation after cardiac ...
Euthanasia is categorically prohibited in almost all countries throughout the world. In Belgium and ...
Euthanasia is categorically prohibited in almost all countries throughout the world. In Belgium and ...
“Donation after cardiac death” is the practice of procuring multiple vital organs from patients who ...
Rules about consent to organ donation are being reviewed in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. In l...
In the past, a vast majority of medical assistance in dying (MAiD) patients were elderly patients wi...
Premortem interventions (PMIs) for organ donation play a vital role in preserving opportunities for ...
The document attached has been archived with permission from the editor of the Medical Journal of Au...
A range of interventions in dying patients can improve both the possibility of successful organ dona...
This article explores how the type of consent given for organ donation should affect the judgement o...
Abstract Organ donation after cessation of circulation and respiration, both controlled and uncontro...
Editor’s key points † The ethical aspects of consent to organ donation after death differ from those...
Many believe that the ethical problems of donation after cardiocirculatory death (DCD) have been "wo...
Euthanasia is controversial amongst healthcare professionals worldwide, but the number of countries ...
In an editorial by the ethics advisors of the British Medical Association, Hamm and Tizzard state th...
'Matters Arising' is a reply to editor letters for an article (titled 'Organ donation after cardiac ...
Euthanasia is categorically prohibited in almost all countries throughout the world. In Belgium and ...
Euthanasia is categorically prohibited in almost all countries throughout the world. In Belgium and ...
“Donation after cardiac death” is the practice of procuring multiple vital organs from patients who ...
Rules about consent to organ donation are being reviewed in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. In l...
In the past, a vast majority of medical assistance in dying (MAiD) patients were elderly patients wi...
Premortem interventions (PMIs) for organ donation play a vital role in preserving opportunities for ...