Posted on 06/16/2006 4:50:48 PM PDT by wagglebee
NEWARK, June 16, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) In some jurisdictions the effort to produce more organs for transplant patients is being aided by plans to streamline the medical criteria for brain death so that organs can be harvested from patients who are still breathing and have a heartbeat.
The New Jersey State Board of Medical Examiners wants to change the rules to allow just one physician to declare brain death. In addition, the rule that currently requires at least one of the two required physicians declaring brain death to be a neurologist or neurosurgeon would also be eliminated. The New Jersey Star Ledger reports that under the proposed rules any doctor given the privileges by a hospital could declare a patient brain dead.
Steven Drake from the disability advocacy organization, Not Dead Yet, told LifeSiteNews.com the New Jersey proposal could go through and if so would likely present a threat to patients.
Any time you loosen the criteria it means that youre going to have more misdiagnosis. Its just a matter of numbers. If you reduce the number and qualifications for the physicians people are going to be misdiagnosed.
Drake, who himself suffered a brain injury at birth and whose attending physician told his relatives he would be better off dead, pointed out that doctors will suffer no consequences when botching a brain death determination. Conveniently, the patient will be dead; there will be no way to confirm it.
The people driving the ethics community further in its current utilitarian direction, Drake said, would rather have more organs available for worthy people than waste resources on people with severe brain injury that many professionals equate privately with those they've labelled brain-dead.
The real problem, some medical ethicists have said, is not that brain death might be misdiagnosed, but that it is not a genuine medical diagnosis in the first place. There is growing fear that human beings are starting to be seen in medical and bioethics circles merely as potential donors of organs.
Attendees at a Vatican conference were warned of the growing eagerness to redefine death in order to facilitate organ transplants from useless brain injury patients into more promising recipients. Dr. Paul Byrne, former president of the Catholic Medical Association in the US declared, Brain death is not death.
Drake told LifeSiteNews.com that confirmation of Byrnes assertion came in his hearing from a very unexpected corner.
Drake was invited to debate prominent bioethicist Peter Singer at a private school in Chicago in 2004. In his speech, Singer said that the brain death criteria did not exist in medical literature until its invention by a group of bioethicists who used it to sell brain death to the public.
Singer said that in the last 30 years nations have all amended the definition of death to include brain death, not because of any medical breakthrough or scientific discovery, but as a result of changes in ethics policies and advances in transplant medicine.
Singer is the worlds foremost advocate of euthanasia and infanticide and his views are immensely influential in the bioethics world. His appointment as De Camp Professor of Bioethics, University Center for Human Values, Princeton University in 1999 is still causing controversy.
Singer pointed to the obvious benefits to hospitals of the invention of brain death to free up beds. But more chillingly, it is the advantage for transplant patients from "brain death" that Singer points to as an improvement.
Singer said, the result of this ethical choice is that a person on a ventilator who would have been considered alive 30 years ago, "is now considered a good candidate for having his chest cut open to take out a beating heart to give to a total stranger."
Drake said the point is clear. We all treat brain death as something real, but until the bioethicists came up with it, it didnt exist.
The Medical Society of New Jersey is reviewing the proposal and the public can comment until July 14.
Contact the Medical Society of New Jersey:
Two Princess Road
Lawrenceville
New Jersey, USA
08648
phone: 609-896-1766
fax: 609-896-1368
socialism at it's finest !
I stand by my original assertion that this can be handled with a will.
I stand by my original assertion that this can be handled with a will.
>> I'm an extremist. <<
Is that like an internist, but you practice dermatology?
bump
I was just getting ready to add that related thread.
I'm wondering if this criteria is in preparation for the Stem Cell facilities?
AND
I don't know how much longer I can stay in this state. I have to find the dividing line between "I'm still trying to fight the good fight" .... and "I give up -- I can't, in good conscience, remain here any longer."
this hints of the "free markets solve all problems" premise, which reflection shows to be oversimplified and, in fact, naive.
They do not. A market is only a tool, a venue, an organization, devoid of constructive moral force. The informed conscience of the market participant solves the problem, with the market being the arena.
Throw something into the marketplace, without setting and enforcing the moral limits, without keeping out of bounds what should be kept out of bounds, and you'll wind up with the slippery slope that leads you to the commoditization of human beings.
That is about as evil as it gets.
Hey, there is no such thing as a slippery slope!
More evil than that. Just about every lawmaker in NJ has some kind of connection to a hospital, whether it's sitting on an advisory board, having an employed relative, doing legal or insurance work. So this is a major conflict of interest. The law lays on the side where the pockets are lined. Body Brokering is BIG business.
Hell, at some point you've got to start worrying if the culture of death is going to decide that a hangnail makes you a "worthless eater" and no longer deserve food and water.
Ghastly!
All they will need to do you in is some rich guy in the next room needing an organ!
I remember "Coma" very well....one of Michael Douglas's earlier films. Never read the book though.
You're not an extremist, you're a realist.
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