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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In six pages this paper discusses how to improve organ donations through clarification of confusion regarding the concepts of death, calming the fears that signing a donor card and offering organ donation consent encourages physicians to hasten death, and the importance of community education to change perceptions, attitudes, and to develop a more informed awareness of what organ donation and transplantation means. Seven sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGorgandon.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
increase, the number of donors is not nearly sufficient to meet the great demand for organs. The problem of improving organ donation is complex because there is considerable confusion
regarding the actual process as well as about the criteria that should be used for correctly determining death. There are also significant differences in the concepts of death that
should also be addressed. Organ donation has evolved from the right of an individual to a moral responsibility. That is why clarification is desperately needed to improve organ
donation and increase the number of people carrying donor cards. According to Koppelman (2003), the concept of death describes the cessation of brain, heart, and breathing function can each be
pinpointed simultaneously with the assistance of modern technology. But sometimes these states are merely suspended - such as in a drug overdose - and therefore what actually constitutes death
comes into serious question (Koppelman, 2003). Over the years, theorists have attempted "to build a consensus against competing concepts of death" (Koppelman, 2003, p. 1). According to Robert
Veatch and Alta Charo, both respected researchers on the notion of death, the concept remains ambiguous because it entails far more than biology alone (Koppelman, 2003). It involves equally
complex realms of metaphysics, social values, and religious beliefs (Koppelman, 2003). An individuals concept of death is based on several factors, which can result in confusion as to whether
or not organ donation would be a socially acceptable or religiously sanctioned practice. It is also important to understand what life and death means in accordance to the medical community.
Death is determined by neurological, cardiac/respiratory, and brain function classifications (Truog, 2007). When a patient in the United States is determined to be brain dead, by attending physicians,
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