Why DCD Donors Are Dead

Author:

Lizza John P1

Affiliation:

1. Kutztown University of Pennsylvania, Kutztown, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

Abstract Critics of organ donation after circulatory death (DCD) argue that, even if donors are past the point of autoresuscitation, they have not satisfied the “irreversibility” requirement in the circulatory and respiratory criteria for determining death, since their circulation and respiration could be artificially restored. Thus, removing their vital organs violates the “dead-donor” rule. I defend DCD donation against this criticism. I argue that practical medical-ethical considerations, including respect for do-not-resuscitate orders, support interpreting “irreversibility” to mean permanent cessation of circulation and respiration. Assuming a consciousness-related formulation of human death, I then argue that the loss of circulation and respiration is significant, because it leads to the permanent loss of consciousness and thus to the death of the human person. The DNR request by an organ donor should thus be interpreted to mean “do not restore to consciousness.” Finally, I respond to an objection that if “irreversibility” has a medical-ethical meaning, it would entail the absurd possibility that one of two individuals in the same physical state could be alive and the other dead—an implication that some think is inconsistent with understanding death as an objective biological state of the organism. I argue that advances in medical technology have created phenomena that challenge the assumption that human death can be understood in strictly biological terms. I argue that ethical and ontological considerations about our nature bear on the definition and determination of death and thus on the permissibility of DCD.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Philosophy,General Medicine,Issues, ethics and legal aspects

Reference39 articles.

1. The Nicomachean Ethics. Rev. ed. Trans. D. Ross;Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press,2009

2. Are organ donors after cardiac death really dead?;Bernat;Journal of Clinical Ethics,2006

3. How do physicians prove irreversibility in the determination of death?,2007

4. How the distinction between “irreversible” and “permanent” illuminates circulatory-respiratory death determination;Journal of Medicine and Philosophy,2010

5. Point/counterpoint editorials: Are donors after circulatory death really dead, and does it matter? Yes and yes. Rebuttal;Chest,2010

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