Ethical Issues in Organ and Tissue Transplantation

dc.contributor.authorAbouna, George M
dc.date.accessioned2025-09-24T13:13:51Z
dc.date.issued2003-12
dc.description.abstractClinical organ transplantation provides a way of giving the gift of life to patients with terminal failure of vital organs, which requires the participation of other fellow human beings and of society by donating organs from deceased or living individuals. The increasing incidence of vital organ failure and the inadequate supply of organs, especially from cadavers, has created a wide gap between organ supply and organ demand, which has resulted in very long waiting times to receive an organ as well as an increasing number of deaths while waiting. These events have raised many ethical, moral and societal issues regarding supply, the methods of organ allocation the use of living donors as volunteers including minors. It has also led to the practice of organ sale by entrepreneurs for financial gains in some parts the world through exploitation of the poor, for the benefit of the wealthy. The current advances in immunology and tissue engineering and the use of animal organs, xenotransplantation, while offering very promising solutions to many of these problems, also raise additional ethical and medical issues, which must be considered by the medical profession as well as society. This review deals with the ethical and moral issues generated by the current advances in organ transplantation, the problem of organ supply versus organ demand and the appropriate allocation of available organs. It deals with the risks and benefits of organ donation from living donors, the appropriate and acceptable methods to increase organ donation from the deceased through the adoption of the principle of ‘presumed consent’, the right methods of providing acceptable appreciation and compensation for the family of the deceased as well as volunteer and altruistic donors, and the duties and responsibilities of the medical profession and society to help fellow humans. The review also deals with the appropriate and ethically acceptable ways of utilizing the recent advances of stem cell transplantation from adult versus fetal donors, tissue engineering and the use of organs from animals or xenotransplantation. It is emphasized that clinical organ and tissue transplantation can be more beneficial and life saving if everyone involved in the process, including physicians and medical institutions, respect and consider the best interests of the patients, as well as honor the ethical, moral and religious values of society.
dc.identifier.citationExperimental and Clinical Transplantation, Cilt 1, Sayı 2, 2003, ss. 125-138en
dc.identifier.eissn2146-8427en
dc.identifier.issn1304-0855
dc.identifier.issue2en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/13578
dc.identifier.volume1en
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherBaşkent Üniversitesi
dc.sourceExperimental and Clinical Transplantationen
dc.subjectOrgan allocation
dc.subjectLiving versus cadaver donor
dc.subjectOrgan sale
dc.subjectDonor compensation
dc.subjectStem cells
dc.subjectXenotransplantation
dc.titleEthical Issues in Organ and Tissue Transplantation
dc.typeArticle

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