Can Cadaveric Organ Donation Rates be Improved?
Open Access
- 1 February 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care
- Vol. 23 (1) , 99-103
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0310057x9502300117
Abstract
There are many reasons why potential cadaveric organ donors may fail to become actual donors. These include permission refusal by the next of kin, incorrect assumptions about medical suitability and, occasionally, an excessive workload in the intensive care unit. Some potential donors currently regarded in Australia as “unrealistic” might become actual donors if attitudes were to change towards ventilation of patients with a clearly hopeless prognosis who have expressed a wish to be organ donors. “Required request” legislation ignores the wishes of the potential donor and “presumed consent” laws also present some ethical difficulties, but a suggested “required response” process could ensure that an individual's wishes concerning organ donation would be known and able to be carried out after death. For the present, however, it is clear that operating within existing Australian legislation and abiding by currently accepted codes of practice, we can still find considerable scope for improving cadaveric organ donation rates.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Obtaining Consent for Organ Donation in Nine NSW Metropolitan HospitalsAnaesthesia and Intensive Care, 1995
- The Identification of Potential Cadaveric Organ DonorsAnaesthesia and Intensive Care, 1995
- UK organ-retrieval scheme deemed illegalThe Lancet, 1994
- Renal grafts from non-heart beating donorsBMJ, 1994
- Response to organ shortage: kidney retrieval programme using non-heart beating donorsBMJ, 1994
- Ethical, Psychosocial, and Public Policy Implications of Procuring Organs From Non—Heart-Beating Cadaver DonorsJAMA, 1993
- Impact of a Required Request Law on Vital Organ ProcurementPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1990
- Protocol for increasing organ donation after cerebrovascular deaths in a district general hospitalThe Lancet, 1990
- Cyclosporine pharmacokinetics in diabetic patients after kidney and pancreas transplantationClinical Transplantation, 1989
- Health professionals and hospital administrators in organ procurement: attitudes, reservations, and their resolutions.American Journal of Public Health, 1988