Ethical Issues in Transplantation

Ethical Issues in Transplantation

Ethical Issues in Transplantation

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Ethical Issues in Transplantation - Guiding Lights

  • Core Ethical Principles:
    • Autonomy: Respecting patient's right to self-determination in decisions.
    • Beneficence: Obligation to act for the benefit of the patient.
    • Non-maleficence: Duty to avoid causing harm ("primum non nocere").
    • Justice: Ensuring fairness in access to transplantation and allocation of scarce organs.
  • Informed Consent:
    • Essential for both living/deceased donors (or surrogates) and recipients.
    • Must be voluntary, based on full information, and given by a competent individual.
  • Confidentiality:
    • Maintaining privacy of donor and recipient information is paramount.

⭐ The "dead donor rule" is a fundamental ethical principle stating that vital organs should only be taken from persons declared dead, and organ retrieval itself must not cause death.

Ethical Issues in Transplantation - Gifting Life

  • Core Principles: Autonomy (patient choice), Beneficence (do good), Non-maleficence (no harm), Justice (fair organ allocation).
  • Informed Consent:
    • Living Donors: Voluntary, fully informed (risks/benefits), free of coercion or financial inducement.
    • Deceased Donors: Prior wish (e.g., donor card) or family consent after Brain Stem Death (BSD) certification.
  • Organ Allocation: Transparent, equitable system based on medical criteria (need, compatibility, wait time). Avoid social/economic bias.
  • Prohibition of Commercialization:
    • Organs are a "gift of life", not for sale. Commercial dealing illegal & unethical.
    • THOTA Act, 1994 strictly regulates.

⭐ THOTA, 1994 (amended 2011, 2014) is India's key law, defining brain death, regulating organ procedures, and preventing commercialization.

  • Vulnerable Populations: Special protection against exploitation for organ donation (e.g., prisoners, economically disadvantaged).
  • Confidentiality: Donor and recipient identities generally kept confidential to protect privacy.

Symbolic organ donation with diverse hands

Ethical Issues in Transplantation - Fair Chances

  • Core Principle: Balance justice (fair access) & utility (maximizing benefit/graft survival).
  • Waiting List Management:
    • Objective medical criteria (blood type, tissue match, medical urgency, waiting time).
    • Transparency in listing & allocation.
    • Avoidance of social worth criteria (e.g., wealth, status).
  • Re-transplantation:
    • Complex ethical dilemma: balancing prior recipient's need vs. new candidates.
    • Consider cause of first graft failure (e.g., non-compliance vs. primary failure).
  • Patient Non-Compliance:
    • Significant factor in graft loss.
    • Ethical debate: Should it impact future allocation? Pre-transplant assessment of adherence potential.

Exam Favourite: The "Rule of Rescue" (prioritizing identifiable individuals in immediate peril) can conflict with utilitarian principles in organ allocation, creating ethical tension when allocating scarce organs to the sickest patients who may have lower survival probability vs. less sick patients with better long-term prognosis.

Ethical Issues in Transplantation - THOA Truths

  • THOA (1994): Transplantation of Human Organs Act governs organ donation & transplantation in India.
  • Aim: Regulate removal, storage, transplantation of human organs for therapeutic purposes; prevent commercial dealings.
  • Key Provisions:
    • Defines brain-stem death for organ retrieval.
    • Living donation: only by near relatives (spouse, son, daughter, father, mother, brother, sister, grandfather, grandmother, grandson, granddaughter) or with special permission for altruistic reasons.
    • Deceased donation: requires consent or lack of objection from family.
  • Authorization Committee (AC): Scrutinizes living donor cases (non-near relative) to ensure no commercial transaction.
  • Amendments (2011):
    • Included tissues.
    • Mandatory Transplant Coordinator.
    • Stricter penalties for violations.
  • Penalties: Imprisonment up to 10 years, fine up to ₹1 crore for commercial dealings.

THOA Amendment Act, 2011 recognized swapping of organs between two families if donors are near relatives but incompatible with their own recipients (swap/paired donation).

  • Informed consent is paramount for both donor and recipient.
  • Strict adherence to brain death criteria (THOA Act) is essential for deceased donation.
  • Equitable organ allocation considers medical urgency, justice, and transparency (NOTO).
  • Commercial organ trade and trafficking are strictly prohibited and illegal.
  • Living donor safety and long-term well-being must always be prioritized.
  • Protecting vulnerable individuals from coercion or exploitation in organ donation is key.

Practice Questions: Ethical Issues in Transplantation

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which of the following statements regarding rejection of solid organ transplants is true?

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Flashcards: Ethical Issues in Transplantation

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_____ is the father of modern transplant surgery and performed the first human liver transplant.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ is the father of modern transplant surgery and performed the first human liver transplant.

Thomas Starzl

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