• Curr Opin Organ Transplant · Apr 2008

    Review

    Routine recovery: an ethical plan for greatly increasing the supply of transplantable organs.

    • Aaron Spital and James S Taylor.
    • The Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Elmhurst Hospital Center, Elmhurst, New York 11373, USA. aspital@att.net
    • Curr Opin Organ Transplant. 2008 Apr 1;13(2):202-6.

    Purpose Of ReviewAll current organ procurement policies require some form of consent. Many families refuse to permit organ recovery from a recently deceased relative; therefore, the major cost of requiring consent is the loss of some lives that could have been saved through transplantation. Here, we argue for a much more efficient approach to organ procurement from brain dead individuals - routine recovery of all transplantable organs without consent.Recent FindingsCareful analysis of the relevant literature shows that, compared with its competitors, routine recovery has the greatest potential to increase cadaveric organ procurement and save lives while causing very little harm. Furthermore, a recent survey suggests that 30% of the US public would already accept routine recovery even though the respondents were not educated regarding the value of this approach.SummaryPatients on the transplant waiting list are dying while organs that could have saved them are being buried or burned because of family refusal to allow posthumous organ procurement. Routine recovery would eliminate this tragic loss of life-saving organs without violating ethical principles. Indeed, we argue that of all the proposals designed to increase the supply of transplantable cadaveric organs, routine recovery is the best.

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