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  1. The dead donor rule and the concept of death: Severing the ties that bind them.Elysa R. Koppelman - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (1):1 – 9.
    One goal of the transplant community is to seek ways to increase the number of people who are willing and able to donate organs. People in states between life and death are often medically excellent candidates for donating organs. Yet public policy surrounding organ procurement is a delicate matter. While there is the utilitarian goal of increasing organ supply, there is also the deontologic concern about respect for persons. Public policy must properly mediate between these two concerns. Currently the dead (...)
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  • (1 other version)Non-heart-beating cadaver procurement and the work of ethics committees.Bethany Spielman & Steve Verhulst - 1997 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 6 (3):282-.
    Recent ethics literature suggests that issues involved in non-heart-beating organ procurement are both highly charged and rather urgent. Some fear that NHB is a public relations disaster waiting to happen or that it will create a backlash against organ donation. The purpose of the study described below was to assess ethics committees' current level of involvement in and readiness for addressing the difficult issues that NHB organ retrieval raises—either proactively through policy development or concurrently through ethics consultation.
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  • (1 other version)Non-Heart-Beating Cadaver Procurement and the Work of Ethics Committees.Bethany Spielman & Steve Verhulst - 1997 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 6 (3):282-287.
    Recent ethics literature suggests that issues involved in non-heart-beating organ procurement are both highly charged and rather urgent. Some fear that NHB is a public relations disaster waiting to happen or that it will create a backlash against organ donation. The purpose of the study described below was to assess ethics committees' current level of involvement in and readiness for addressing the difficult issues that NHB organ retrieval raises—either proactively through policy development or concurrently through ethics consultation.
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  • Harming the dead and saving the living.James Lindemann Nelson - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (1):13 – 15.
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  • Beyond Pittsburgh: Protocols for Controlled Non-Heart-Beating Cadaver Organ Recovery.Bethany Spielman & Cynthia Simmons McCarthy - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (4):323-333.
    Much of the ethical debate about controlled non-heart-beating cadaver (NHBC) organ recovery has focused on the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) protocol. Some commentators have voiced serious reservations about the ethical acceptability of that protocol; others have argued that the protocol contains sufficiently stringent ethical safeguards to warrant a limited and carefully monitored trial at UPMC. UPMC is not the only organization pursuing controlled NHBC organ procurement, however. The study of organ procurement organizations described in this article suggests that (...)
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