Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Organ Harvesting Before "Brain-Death" Increasingly Common, Concerned Doctors Warn
Warning that changing definition of death will eventually lead to organ harvesting from disabled

By Gudrun Schultz
WASHINGTON, D.C.,

March 21, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Organ harvesting from patients before brain-death has been declared is a rapidly increasing trend in U. S. hospitals, the Washington Post reported March 18, alarming doctors and ethicists about the dubious ethics behind the practice.

Instead of waiting until brain function ceases and the patient is declared "brain-dead" by medical officials (itself a questionable practice since there is no universally-accepted definition of brain-death) surgeons have begun following an approach known as "donation after cardiac death." Organs are harvested once the heart has stopped beating and several minutes have passed without the heart spontaneously re-starting.

"The person is not dead yet," said Jerry A. Menikoff, an associate professorof law, ethics and medicine at the University of Kansas. "They are going tobe dead, but we should be honest and say that we're starting to remove theorgans a few minutes before they meet the legal definition of death."
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