Posted on 05/09/2010 11:49:35 AM PDT by wagglebee
I found the article about the Belgian euthanasia coupled with organ harvesting referenced in my critique yesterday of a bioethics journal article urging that very approach. The woman in question was not terminally ill, but in a locked-in state, that is, fully conscious and completely paralyzed. She wanted to diea desire accommodated by her doctors. Just prior to being killed, she decided to donate her organs. From, Organ donation after physician-assisted death, (Letter to the Editor) published in the journal Transplantation (21 (2008) 915no link):
The day before the euthanasia, the patient expressed her will of after-death organ donation. The ethical and legal possibility of combination of the two separate processes, physician-assisted suicide and after-death organ donation was then considered and agreed by the institutional ethical committee president. The intravenous euthanasia procedure was performed according to the regular protocol, in the presence of the patients husband, in a room adjacent to the operative room. The patient was in her regular hospital bed. No member of the transplant team was present during the euthanasia. When the patients death was declared by three independent physicians after 10 min of absence of cardiac activity, her cadaver was placed on the operative table. The liver and both kidneys were harvested and transplanted according to the regular Eurotransplant organ allocation rules for after-death organ donation. Currently, more than 1 year later, all three recipients are enjoying a normal graft function.
If this doesnt set off alarm bells about how the sick and disabled are increasingly being looked upon not only as burdens (to themselves, families, and society), but potential objects for exploitation, what will? A disabled woman was killed, even though people with locked-in states often adjust over time to their disabilities and are happy to be alive. Indeed, the book The Diving Bell and the Butterfly-written byJean-Dominique Baubytells just such a story.
Moreover, agreeing to harvest organs from euthanasia/assisted suicides raises the very realistic prospect that despairing people with terminal illnesses or disabilities (or perhaps, just despair) could latch onto being killed for their organs as a way of bringing meaning to their lives. This is very dangerous territory, made all the more treacherous by doctors, spouses, and a respected medical journal validating the ideas that dead is better than disabled and that living patients can, essentially, be viewed as a natural resource to be killed and mined.
The authors dont see it that way, of course. They have visions of organs dancing before their eyes:
This case of two separate requests, first euthanasia and second, organ donation after death, demonstrates that organ harvesting after euthanasia may be considered and accepted from ethical, legal and practical viewpoints in countries where euthanasia is legally accepted. This possibility may increase the number of transplantable organs and may also provide some comfort to the donor and his (her) family, considering that the termination of the patients life may somehow help other human beings in need for organ transplantation.
Taking the organs was the easy decision. Once youve pulled medicine into the forbidden zone of active killing, finding self-congratulatory justifications becomes a most desirable quest.
Some might defend the act by noting the patients decision to be euthanized was not made concurrent with her decision to be an organ donor. I dont see the distinction. Besides, once society accepts that the two can be joined, saving others could easily become a frequent motivation for asking to be killed. Heck, given the number of non voluntary euthanasia deaths in the Netherlandscoupled with the push for presumed consent to harvest organschoice itself could one day become moot.
And that is the slippery slope we are on.
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Here in Oregon they want to pass new legislation that ALL ODL will be donors unless the licensed driver speaks up and says no I do not want to be an organ donor, IOW it is an auto yes unless one declines.
Soon they’ll just stop asking.
That’s horrible. If this comes to the United States, American doctors will be put on the spot in a similar way sooner or later. You’ve no doubt heard about the anaolgy about putting an evil genie back in a bottle.
Disguisting.
It's coming unless we get rid of 0care.
The disabled are going to be told that can go from being a "burden on society" to being a "blessing on society" but it up to them an first, (but soon the disabled person will be taken out of that loop) it will then be up to the courts and then up to disabled persons guardian...
The line between "a right to die" and "a responsibility to die" is thin at best... and in a socialist mind set where "personal rights and personal responsibility" blurry, where you have no "rights or responsibility" for your own your labor or "rights or responsibility" for yourself... that line is gone line
IBTDB
Most of them have either left or shut up.
But, but, but, weren’t we assured that this sort of thing wouldn’t be happening?
Just like with abortion and homosexual marriage.
Yeah well, you know, it's just "hope and change".
This is precisely the circumstances that Socialists have been working to achieve for sixty years.
Welcome to the One World Paradise . . . comrade.
A “Killer Doc” suggests the wrong thing in my presence, he’s a “Killed Doc”. I have no intention of letting any of these pukes get away with it when it comes to me and my own. Just the suggestion makes it worth disposing of them like the rubbish they really are.
NY State may already be on board.
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