I Hate Dialysis Message Board
Dialysis Discussion => Dialysis: News Articles => Topic started by: okarol on August 05, 2008, 12:42:09 PM
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http://www.docguide.com/news/content.nsf/news/852571020057CCF68525749B0076ADBB
New AAP Policy on Minors as Living Solid-Organ Donors
Although rare, children do serve as living solid-organ donors, and these donations raise serious ethical issues. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has published guidelines to examine the exceptional circumstances under which minors aged younger than 18 can morally serve as living organ donors.
The clinical report entitled, "Minors as Living Solid-Organ Donors," appears in the August issue of Pediatrics. The United States Live Organ Donor Consensus group suggested 4 of the 5 criteria published, with the approval of the AAP.
First, both the donor and recipient must be highly likely to benefit. The psychological benefit for the donor is most likely to be high if donations are restricted to an immediate family member. Minors should never be considered as potential donors for strangers, or in cases where the likelihood of success is low.
Second, the surgical risk for the donor should be extremely low. This suggests children should be restricted to serving as living kidney donors, which has lower risks than other types of living solid-organ donation.
Third, a child should be the donor of last resort and should not undergo donor evaluation until all other options are exhausted, including the potential for a deceased donor.
Fourth, the child should freely agree to donate without coercion and with full understanding of the process. Children who are too young to fully understand should not be allowed to donate.
The AAP adds a fifth criterion that the emotional and psychological risks to child donors be minimised. This may be accomplished through medical role playing, allowing them to ask questions and including them in the decision-making process.
A donor-advocacy team to work with the child should be required for all transplants that involve living minor donors. Finally, more research should be conducted into the long-term benefits and risks of donation for children.
The complete report can be viewed here: http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/122/2/454
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I would suggest taking an entirely different perspective on the issue. If there is likely to be a net gain in the health and life expectancy in the pair of people in any organ donation situation then the donation should be regarded as ethical. Marx wrote that the ethical intuitions of any culture will always be a by-product of its background economic system, so it is not surprising that in the capitalist world medical ethics goes out of its way to ensure that the donor is gaining as much or more than the recipient before allowing the donation to go ahead. This is consistent with capitalism's general emphasis on everyone refusing to help anyone else unless it is for selfish reasons. But why is donor generosity automatically ruled out as unethical?