Three decades after the first heart transplant surgery stunned
the world, organs including eyes, lungs, livers, kidneys, and
hearts are transplanted every day. But despite its increasingly
routine nature-or perhaps because of it-transplantation offers
enormous ethical challenges. A medical ethicist who has been
involved in the organ transplant debate for many years, Robert M.
Veatch explores a variety of questions that continue to vex the
transplantation community, offering his own solutions in many
cases.
Ranging from the most fundamental questions to recently emerging
issues, "Transplantation Ethics" is the first complete and
systematic account of the ethical and policy controversies
surrounding organ transplants. Veatch structures his discussion
around three major topics: the definition of death, the procurement
of organs, and the allocation of organs. He lobbies for an
allocation system-administered by nonphysicians-that considers both
efficiency and equity, that takes into consideration the patient's
age and previous transplant history, and that operates on a
national rather than a regional level.
Rich with case studies and written in an accessible style, this
comprehensive reference is intended for a broad cross section of
people interested in the ethics of transplantation from either the
medical or public policy perspective: patients and their relatives,
transplantation professionals, other health care professionals and
administrators, social workers, members of organ procurement
organizations, and government officials involved in the regulation
of transplants.
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