Killing the Dead Donor Rule: Why Should We Trust the Promises of Regulatory Control?
This is Part 2 of my deconstruction of an article in the NEJM proposing to end the dead donor rule in organ transplantation. Hit this link to read Part 1:
In the end, since the authors of "The Dead Donor Rule and Organ Transplantation" apparently believe we can't really get many viable organs from truly dead patients, they seek to shift the ethical ground. Restricting donation of vital organs to the truly dead is to be discarded, and in its place they propose that old catchall--"choice:"
Whether death occurs as the result of ventilator withdrawal or organ procurement, the ethically relevant precondition is valid consent by the patient or surrogate. With such consent, there is no harm or wrong done in retrieving vital organs before death, provided that anesthesia is administered. With proper safeguards, no patient will die from vital organ donation who would not otherwise die as a result of the withdrawal of life support.No. No. No. First, not all patients whose life support is removed necessarily die, for example the terrible case in California where the surgeon was charged with trying to hasten the death of a prospective donor (charges that now appear likely to be dropped) when the patient did not go into cardiac arrest after cessation of life support. More to the point, why should we trust bioethicists and organ transplant professionals to enforce "proper safeguards" when this article claims that the current safeguards aren't adequate despite being told for years that they are? And if the only thing that matters is consent, why not let any seriously ill patient be killed for their organs? Yes, this has been seriously proposed, as I discussed in Culture of Death.
Besides, "the bioethicists" have a terrible record overall of keeping to their solemn promises about control, guidelines, and limitations, to wit:
- Dehydration of the cognitively devastated, as originally packaged, was only to be permitted in cases of patients unquestionably in PVS. Now, conscious patients are dehydrated all the time.
- When ESCR broke on the scene, we were told that "all" the biotechnologists wanted were the "leftover" IVF embryos. Now, the National Academy of Sciences has given its ethical imprimatur to creating embryos for research whether through fertilization or cloning, and cloning is pursued at Harvard, Stanford, and other facilities.
- Assisted suicide is supposed to be limited to the terminally ill for whom nothing else can be done to alleviate suffering. We have seen in Oregon and elsewhere that that promise has certainly not been kept. Indeed, they kill babies in their cribs in the Netherlands based on eugenic criteria.
And now, we are urged to move from taking vital organs from the dead, to taking them from the living who will die anyway.
This is the ultimate point: Across a broad front we are being pushed toward objectifying and instrumentalizing human life by treating some of us as mere resources to benefit those whose lives are deemed to have better quality, and hence, greater moral worth. That is not only unethical, it is profoundly immoral. And if it continues, it will lead to a collapse in the public's trust in medicine, bioethics, and bioscience.
Labels: Killing for Organs. Dead Donor Rule. Organ Transplantation.


9 Comments:
Wesley, you said: "And now, we are urged to move from taking vital organs from the dead, to taking them from the living who will die anyway."
That might be an even more profound comment than you intended. "The living who will die anyway" includes all of us, as none of us is immortal. And, as you have mentioned in your past books, some utilitarians have even proposed killing a healthy person if harvesting his/her organs would benefit enough other people who require them to live. The "logic" is that the person's organs benefit only him/her—one person—while he/she is alive, but they would benefit X (number) others if he/she dies. X is greater than one, of course, meaning better for society...
When the philosophies that you decry completely take over the medical field, none of us will be safe.
K-Man: When I wrote that, the same thought struck me, but I decided not to go there. But I am glad you did.
By the way, in this regard there is an old Monty Python movie where the organ people come in and forcibly take a man's organs because his number came up in the lottery or something. I'll have to see if I can find it on You Tube.
Found the MP "Living Organ Donor" bit and put it up. Ugh! But it is germane.
And as taking organs from live donors is _itself_ an abuse and a wrong in itself, it isn't principally a matter of whether we can trust regulations to curb "abuses." It's already an abuse.
I remember when the Groningen Protocol came out and the people putting it forward said, "This isn't a slippery slope." I mean, they're talking about actively killing live, born, babies. So they've already hit the _bottom_ of any slippery slope around. What could he even be talking about? Actively killing live, born, babies _without_ their parents' consent as opposed to _with_ it?
Some of this stuff is so outrageous that I think our first reaction should be, "This _is_ the bottom. This _is_ the abuse," rather than, chiefly, "But how can we trust them not to allow it to get worse?"
Lydia, we are nowhere near bottom. The problem is that too many people quickly accept these things with a shrug if it doesn't affect them personally at the momment. I fear that Dostoevsky had it right when he wrote, "Man can get used to anything, the beast."
How long have people been doing organ donation? Were there ever any ethical objections when it started? Are there any people today besides me who think it's wrong even if the donor is absolutely dead?
I see your point, Wesley, but in that sense, there _is_ no bottom. I mean, will cannibalism be the bottom? The evil can always think of something more evil to do. I do worry a bit that rhetorically we play into their hands if, instead of saying, "But this already _is_ an abuse. This already _is_ one of those things we thought could never happen. This already _is_ deeply evil in itself," we say rather, "How do we know that your promises that there will be regulation will be kept?" I think this was especially clear with the Groningen Protocol.
John, yes, I'm one of the only people I know who has serious ethical questions about vital organ donation even from truly dead donors. I write and think a lot about these issues and don't always tell people this, because there are all these additional issues--Is brain dead really dead? Are they going to start taking organs from PVS people? And these issues are important and should certainly concern even people who think donation from truly dead donors is entirely morally in the clear. But a couple of years ago (perhaps a bit less) I had a post on a now-defunct blog (you can find the archives only with the way-back machine) called Right Reason in which I questioned even dead-donor donation as uncomfortably analogous to cannibalism. It garnered over a hundred comments, some of them highly intelligent, some of them nearly illiterate. I don't think a single person agreed with me. Interestingly, this is one case where my not being Roman Catholic but rather Protestant worked in the opposite direction from the usual one. Often, the Protestant has fewer constraints on his ethical norms than the Catholic. But in this case, the Catholic Church definitely teaches that dead-donor organ donation is morally licit, so only a Protestant or other non-Catholic Christian can seriously challenge that proposition.
My impression (though I was either not born or too young at the time to remember it myself) is that there was indeed a vigorous debate about whether organ donation was ethical, with some people seriously questioning it, and that those on the side of its being ethical won--sociologically speaking--that debate in the public mind, even among groups who take such issues very seriously.
Wesley: What's your take on opt-out organ donation initiatives?
Also, an interesting article this week in Slate by Dr. Sally Satel about the Nat'l Kidney Foundation's position against compensating organ donors.
http://www.slate.com/id/2197566/
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