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Organ donation in the Philippines: should the dead do more.
Indian J Med Ethics ; 2014 Jul-Sept; 11 (3): 143-150
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-179974
ABSTRACT
This paper asks whether the Philippines should focus on ways of dealing with end-stage renal disease by getting more transplantable kidneys from the dead. Would it be more ethical to put the burden to donate on the dead (who have already lost their chance to consent) than on the living (who can consent)? Given the risks involved in undergoing nephrectomy and the lack of benefits arising from the procedure to donors, the dead should be the first to put their kidneys on the line. In the Philippines, unfortunately, living donors have had to bear the greater burden in this regard. Starting with a brief account of developments surrounding the impact of the Declaration of Istanbul on the situation in the Philippines as well as in other countries, the paper examines what the living have been expected to do, what they have actually done, and what lessons the experience with living donors offers for the understanding of cadaver transplants. The paper then looks at possible ways of increasing the sources of kidneys for transplantation and asks if these ways could be implemented successfully and ethically in the Philippines.
Full text: Available Index: IMSEAR (South-East Asia) Language: English Journal: Indian J Med Ethics Journal subject: Ethics Year: 2014 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: IMSEAR (South-East Asia) Language: English Journal: Indian J Med Ethics Journal subject: Ethics Year: 2014 Type: Article