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Belgian doctors harvest high quality organs from euthanased patients
A group of Belgian doctors are harvesting
“high quality” organs from patients who have been euthanased. This is not a
secret project, but one which they described openly at a conference organised
by the Belgian Royal Medical Academy in December.
In a PowerPoint
presentation, Dirk Ysebaert, Dirk Van Raemdonck, Michel Meurisse, of
the University Hospitals Of Antwerp, Leuven And Liège, showed that about 20% of
the 705 people who died through euthanasia (officially) in 2008 were suffering
from neuromuscular disorders whose organs are relatively high quality for
transplanting to other patients. This represents a useful pool of organs which
could help to remedy a shortage of organs in Belgium (as everywhere else).
It is not clear from the presentation how
many patients participated in their scheme. However, in a
2008 report, Belgian doctors explained that three patients had been
euthanased between 2005 and 2007 and had agreed to donate their organs.
Euthanasia for organ transplant is a bit different
from normal euthanasia, the doctors say, because they prefer that patients die
in hospital rather than at home.
They have developed a protocol for the
procedure. There has to be a strict separation between the euthanasia request,
the euthanasia procedure, and the organ procurement. The donor and his (or her) relatives have
to consent. The euthanasia is performed by a neurologist or psychiatrist and
two house physicians. Organ retrieval begins after clinical diagnosis of death
by the three physicians. And, of course, staff participation is voluntary.
This seems like the ultimate in utilitarian
compassion: make paralysed people feel useful by killing them for their organs.
It’s something to look forward to if euthanasia ever get legalised. ~ thanks to
Carinne Brochier, of l'Institut
Européen de Bioéthique, in Brussels.
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