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  1. Postmortem procedures in the emergency department: using the recently dead to practise and teach.K. V. Iserson - 1993 - Journal of Medical Ethics 19 (2):92-98.
    In generations past, it was common practice for doctors to learn lifesaving technical skills on patients who had recently died. But this practice has lately been criticised on religious, legal, and ethical grounds, and has fallen into disuse in many hospitals and emergency departments. This paper uses four questions to resolve whether doctors in emergency departments should practise and teach non-invasive and minimally invasive procedures on the newly dead: Is it ethically and legally permissible to practise and teach non-invasive and (...)
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  • Reanimation: overcoming objections and obstacles to organ retrieval from non-heart-beating cadaver donors.R. D. Orr, S. R. Gundry & L. L. Bailey - 1997 - Journal of Medical Ethics 23 (1):7-11.
    Interest in the retrieval of organs from non-heart-beating cadaver donors has been rekindled by the success of transplantation of solid organs and the insufficient supply of donor organs currently obtained from heart-beating cadaver donors. There are currently two retrieval techniques being evaluated, the in situ cold perfusion approach and the controlled death approach. Both, however, raise ethical concerns. Reanimation is a new method which has been used successfully in animals. We believe this new approach overcomes the ethical objections raised to (...)
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  • (1 other version)Contemporary Transplantation Initiatives: Where's the Harm in Them?David P. T. Price - 1996 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 24 (2):139-149.
    Two contemporary strategies in cadaver organ transplantation, both with the potential to affect significantly expanding organ transplant waiting list sizes, have evolved: elective ventilation and use of nonheart-beating donors. Both are undergoing a period of critical review. It is not clear how widely EV is practiced around the world. In Great Britain, the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital was the first hospital to develop an EV protocol, in 1988, after which other British hospitals followed suit. In the 1980s, new NHBD (...)
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  • (1 other version)Contemporary Transplantation Initiatives: Where's the Harm in Them?David P. T. Price - 1996 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 24 (2):139-149.
    Two contemporary strategies in cadaver organ transplantation, both with the potential to affect significantly expanding organ transplant waiting list sizes, have evolved: elective ventilation and use of nonheart-beating donors. Both are undergoing a period of critical review. It is not clear how widely EV is practiced around the world. In Great Britain, the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital was the first hospital to develop an EV protocol, in 1988, after which other British hospitals followed suit. In the 1980s, new NHBD (...)
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