Breaking down organ donation borders: Revisiting “opt out” residency requirements in the UK

Author:

Parsons Jordan A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

All four UK nations have, in recent years, introduced “opt out” organ donation systems. Whilst these systems are largely similar, they operate independently. A key feature of each policy is a residency requirement, stipulating that opt out may only apply where the deceased had been ordinarily resident in that nation for at least 12 months. A resident of Scotland who dies in England, for example, would not fall under opt out. Public awareness is the underlying reasoning for such stipulations. A residency requirement was appropriate when Wales was the only UK nation with an opt out system, but, I suggest, the continued imposition of intra-UK borders on organ donation is unjustified now that all four nations operate the same policy. Further, it has the potential to limit organ donation. There is a need for all four systems to be amended to allow for UK-wide applicability, such that providing the deceased was ordinarily resident in the UK, they can fall under opt out in any of the four nations. I argue that such an amendment is ethically justified – continuing to satisfy the public awareness criterion – and practically straightforward. In doing so, I emphasise that my proposed amendment should extend only to the four UK nations, stopping short of the Crown Dependencies even though they also operate opt out systems for organ donation.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference13 articles.

1. Welsh Government. HumanTransplantation (Wales) Bill Explanatory Memorandum incorporating the Regulatory Impact Assessment and Explanatory Notes. Available at: https://senedd.wales/laid%20documents/pri-ld9121-em-r%20-%20revised%20explanatory%20memorandum%20human%20transplantation%20(wales)%20bill-25062013-247379/pri-ld9121-em-r-e-english.pdf. 2013.

2. The Human Transplantation (Wales) Act 2013: an Act of Encouragement, not Enforcement

3. UK Parliament. Lord McColl of Dulwich’s amendment, After Clause 1. Available at: https://bills.parliament.uk/bills/2071/stages/10745/amendments/10919. 2019.

4. HL Deb Friday 1 February 2019, vol. 795, col. 1270.

5. Human Tissue in Transplantation and Research

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