Body Donation after Medically Assisted Death: An Emerging Consideration for Donor Programs

Around the world, the recent introduction of assisted death laws has meant that undertaking medical assistance in dying (MAID) is now an option for some persons wishing to end their life. Some of these people donate their bodies to medical science, and by doing so have created a new route from which...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anatomical sciences education 2019-07, Vol.12 (4), p.417-424
Hauptverfasser: Wainman, Bruce C., Cornwall, Jon
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Cornwall, Jon
description Around the world, the recent introduction of assisted death laws has meant that undertaking medical assistance in dying (MAID) is now an option for some persons wishing to end their life. Some of these people donate their bodies to medical science, and by doing so have created a new route from which donor programs can now receive bodies. Such donations have also illuminated a myriad of novel ethical questions. This article considers the emotive and controversial topic of MAID in relation to body donation, describing the experiences of McMaster University, Canada, where several MAID body donors have been received by the anatomical donor program. It provides background on the development and implementation of MAID in Canada, and describes the experience of staff and students at McMaster to MAID donations. It also explores the relevance of MAID to body donation programs, and discusses several of the ethical challenges facing body donation programs who may encounter MAID body donors. These include the appropriateness of accepting MAID donors, issues with informed consent, the effect of personal engagement with MAID donors, information sharing around MAID donations, governance issues, and negative historical parallels between MAID and euthanasia. Suggestions on how to manage MAID body donation focus on how issues affecting institutions, faculty, and students may be approached utilizing appropriate transparency and communication, some of which may facilitate student professional development around the topic of MAID. It is also suggested that the development of ethically appropriate guidelines on MAID body donations may positively guide the anatomical community.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ase.1874
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subjects Anatomy
Anatomy - education
Anatomy - ethics
Assisted suicide
body bequest program
body donation
Canada
Colleges
Death
Donations
donor program
Donors
Ethics
euthanasia
Euthanasia - ethics
Foreign Countries
Governance
Guidelines as Topic
Human Body
Humans
Informed Consent
MAID
medical assistance in dying
Medical Education
Medical Services
medically assisted death
Medicine
Morals
Students - psychology
Suicide, Assisted - ethics
Suicide, Assisted - legislation & jurisprudence
Tissue and Organ Procurement - ethics
Tissue and Organ Procurement - organization & administration
Tissue and Organ Procurement - standards
Tissue Donors - ethics
Universities - ethics
Universities - organization & administration
Universities - standards
title Body Donation after Medically Assisted Death: An Emerging Consideration for Donor Programs
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