Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/30511
Title: Organ transplants : the ethics of donation
Authors: Grima, G.
Keywords: Transplantation of organs, tissues, etc. -- Moral and ethical aspects
Medical ethics
Procurement of organs, tissues, etc. -- Moral and ethical aspects
Issue Date: 2000
Publisher: Bioethics Consultative Committee
Citation: Grima, G. (2000). Organ transplants : the ethics of donation. Patients' rights, Reproductive technology, Transplantation, Malta. 91- 96
Abstract: There is perhaps no other medical technology which has changed our self-perception more than organ transplant technology. Now that the procedure has by and large passed the experimental stage and it is becoming increasingly safer to apply, patients requiring an organ replacement can justifiably hope for a longer and healthier life. Yet the promise which medical progress holds in this respect depends, in the circumstances, very much on human generosity. The core philosophical problem, relating to organ transplants, as I see it, originates precisely from a particular state of dependence in which a certain category of patents has been placed. These patients have no claim to anybody's organs. They can only wait until the organ or organs which they require is or are actually given. Yet is it not true that the greater the need the higher is the demand and the stronger is the claim for help! If people's needs play a crucial role in a theory of justice, one may find it hard to draw the dividing line between justice and generosity.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/30511
ISBN: 9990999317
Appears in Collections:Patients' rights, Reproductive technology, Transplantation

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