Since 1968, a brain-based criterion of death has been adopted in medical practice and passed into law or national guidelines in most countries worldwide. In some countries, such as Australia, Spain, and the United States, death can be determined by either the circulatory and respiratory criterion or by the neurological criterion. This practice corresponds to recommendations by the World Health Organization and the World Medical Association. In the USA, the Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) provides that “an individual who has sustained either (1) irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions or (2) irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem, is dead.” We show that the UDDA...
Should the criterion for death require permanent or irreversible cessation of function? "Permanent"m...
The whole-brain criterion of death provides that a person who has irreversibly lost all clinical fun...
abstract: The concept of when human death occurs had for most of history been determined by criteria...
The Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) provides that “an individual who has sustained either ...
The UK, France, and Switzerland determine death using the brain criterion even in organ donation aft...
In 1968 the authors of the so-called Harvard Report, proposed the recognition of an irreversible com...
Humanity has been confronted with the concept and criteria of death for millennia and the line betwe...
A philosophical investigation into the definition of death and the best criterion for determining ...
The article presents information on the adoption of law Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) ...
In 1968, an Ad Hoc committee at the Harvard Medical School advanced new criteria for determining dea...
For ten days after Motl Brody had been declared dead by physicians, the 12-year-old boy lay in an in...
Background: The fundamental determinant of death in donation after circulatory determination of dea...
Since intensive care medicine enables us to maintain blood circulation and respiration artificially ...
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Brain death, also known as death by neurologic criteria (DNC), is a well-establis...
In recent time the critique of the whole brain death as the criterion of human death, that was intro...
Should the criterion for death require permanent or irreversible cessation of function? "Permanent"m...
The whole-brain criterion of death provides that a person who has irreversibly lost all clinical fun...
abstract: The concept of when human death occurs had for most of history been determined by criteria...
The Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) provides that “an individual who has sustained either ...
The UK, France, and Switzerland determine death using the brain criterion even in organ donation aft...
In 1968 the authors of the so-called Harvard Report, proposed the recognition of an irreversible com...
Humanity has been confronted with the concept and criteria of death for millennia and the line betwe...
A philosophical investigation into the definition of death and the best criterion for determining ...
The article presents information on the adoption of law Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) ...
In 1968, an Ad Hoc committee at the Harvard Medical School advanced new criteria for determining dea...
For ten days after Motl Brody had been declared dead by physicians, the 12-year-old boy lay in an in...
Background: The fundamental determinant of death in donation after circulatory determination of dea...
Since intensive care medicine enables us to maintain blood circulation and respiration artificially ...
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Brain death, also known as death by neurologic criteria (DNC), is a well-establis...
In recent time the critique of the whole brain death as the criterion of human death, that was intro...
Should the criterion for death require permanent or irreversible cessation of function? "Permanent"m...
The whole-brain criterion of death provides that a person who has irreversibly lost all clinical fun...
abstract: The concept of when human death occurs had for most of history been determined by criteria...