"The ethical principles autonomy beneficence nonmaleficence and justice must be used within the organ transplant allocation" Essays and Research Papers

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    practice of organ transplantation has grown by leaps and bounds over the last 50 years. Each year the medical profession takes more risk with decisions regarding transplants‚ how to allocate for organs‚ and most recently conducting transplants on children with adult organs. “An organ transplantation is a surgical operation where a failing or damaged organ in the human body is removed and replaced with a new one” (Caplan‚ 2009). Not all organs can be transplanted. The term “organ transplant” typically

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    An Ethical Implication of Organ Transplants Nickolus Sorenson Health Care Ethics and Medical Law Instructor: Kymberly Lum September 24‚ 2012 All aspects of health care face the inevitability of moral and ethical issues arising on numerous fronts. The organ donation and transplantation field of medicine is no exception. Each day‚ approximately 18 people die waiting for an organ to become available for transplant (Taranto‚ 2010). In the grand scheme

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    When nursing a fundamentally human science‚ and considering that the last decades have been characterized by major technological and social changes‚ the nurse must have a thorough knowledge of ethical science to put it into practice nurse work. It is constantly faced with ethical dilemmas difficult to resolve individually. This should note that the patient wants to become more involved in their own process and the decisions that will affect them. The nurse patient relationship is widening‚ since

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    waiting for transplants that can’t take place. A patient in urgent need of an organ can easily be saved but the transplant does not take place because of a wait list. Patients who urgently need an organ transplant who meet the criteria should get the organ(s) first. The reasons behind this is‚ if a patient is on their death-bed and in need of an organ not getting this organ can lead to potential death. Another reason is the chance of survival that the patient has urgent or nonurgent the organ should be

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    Bonnie Kalka Mark MacDowell PHL-103 December 4‚ 2012 Organ Transplantation The history of transplantation is an epic journey describing the medical community’s need to understand how the human body works and how you can ultimately defy illness and death. The most important component is the generosity of organ and tissue donors‚ and the courage of those whom receive the transplant. Transplantation goes back many Centuries‚ in the 9th Century BC Ancient folklore in most cultures describe

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    COMMERCIALIZATION OF ORGAN TRANSPLANTS Assignment 1: Commercialization of Organ Transplants Professor Dorothy A. Sliben Bus 309- Business Ethics April 27‚ 2014 Strayer University Commercialization of Organ Transplants In this essay I am to act as a member of an ethics committee who listens to arguments for and against altering the way in which human organs are obtained for patients in need of transplants. In this case a new policy has been made to allow the sale of organs by consenting

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    doing good and causing no harm. Similarly‚ principles of nursing ethics provide nurses a tool to base ethical decision upon. Grace (2014) expressed ethical principal as set of rules‚ standards or guidelines for activity that are extracted from theoretical proposition and are different from moral theories. They are about what is good for humans. According to Phang (2014) there seven specific ethical principles of nursing that are nonmaleficencebeneficence‚ independence‚ fairness‚ loyalty‚ paternalism

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    Honors Activity 6.3 Organ Transplants In order to prevent the rejection of transplanted organs in a person’s body‚ immunosuppressive therapy is necessary. These drugs have saved many lives and extended many others. The number of patients taking immunosuppressive drugs is not decreasing and at the same time doctors following up their patients after an organ transplant must be very vigilant and need to monitor the patience response to the therapy very closely. Unfortunately science has not yet

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    4: Commercialization of Organ Transplants Jennifer A. Blake Professor Kim Williams Business Ethics Abstract Today I come before as not only a member of this committee but as an ethical human of sound moral compass. I have reviewed both sides of the arguments‚ in addition to policy procedures and both ethical and unethical arguments. “Despite stringent and fine-tuned laws most jurisdictions are not able to curb organ trafficking. Nor are they able to provide organs to the needy. There are reports

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    United States‚ a patient who wants an organ transplant from a cadaverous donor must become part of an elaborate nationwide organ distribution system. This system‚ known collectively as the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN)‚ is operated by the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS)‚ an independent nonprofit organization working under contract with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. *Organ transplantation is the moving of an organ from one body to another or from a

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