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To: Cold Heat

So, are they harvesting organs before the patient is really dead? If so, this is speeding up the death, isn’t it?
Isn’t that euthanasia?


31 posted on 04/12/2007 7:41:42 AM PDT by Muzzle_em (A proud warrior of the Pajamahadeen)
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To: Muzzle_em
So, are they harvesting organs before the patient is really dead?

Yes. See post # 11.

34 posted on 04/12/2007 7:49:36 AM PDT by outofstyle
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To: Muzzle_em
If so, this is speeding up the death, isn’t it? Isn’t that euthanasia?

Not as I see it. I think to call it Euthanasia, is not rational. Euthanasia infers the killing of living thing that was compromised medically or would have lived without intervention at the very least.

Hastening a impending death by not intervening medically could be considered killing by some, but certainly not murder by law.

In my opinion, if the death of a person is certain, hastening that death by a few days to protect the viability of needed organs that will add many years to the quality of life for multiple people is a rational thing to contemplate, assuming the person making the donation has agreed upon the terms in advance of his/her demise.

This is the root rationality of the donor system, and in this particular case, the family was not able to comply with the donors wishes and now is trying to shift the responsibility to the hospital and doctor. The fact that the family was not able to comply, happen all the time, but to try to shift the responsibility to the doctor, seems quite petty and egregious to me.

This is not rational. It is hypocrisy and emotional laden clap-trap.

40 posted on 04/12/2007 8:23:40 AM PDT by Cold Heat (Mitt....2008)
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