the ethical challenges in organ donation and transplantation 8 th annual bioethics and palliative...
TRANSCRIPT
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The Ethical Challenges in Organ Donation and
Transplantation
8th Annual Bioethics and Palliative Care Conference
Margaret Allee, RN, MS, MSN, JD
November 7, 2014
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Disclosure Slide OBTAIN FROM OHSU
Margaret Allee, RN, MS, MSN, JD has no relevant financial relationships to disclose that would present a conflict of interest
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Objectives
Participants will be able to: Identify the ethical principles associated
with organ donation/transplantation Describe acceptable and unacceptable
criteria for the allocation of scarce resources
Explain why the application of ethical principles is critical in the allocation of organs
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The goal of saving an individual has to be balanced against concern for the social good and the wish to preserve such basic values as:
- justice- fairness- human dignity- bodily integrity
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Organ transplantation depends on its very existence on a unique trust between society and physicians, and on the willingness of ordinary people to share their organs and tissue.
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Transplantation is steeped in:
Religions and cultural values of atruism
Sacrifice and generosity Political notions of: community
reciprocityshared risksocial solidarity
But there are also deep contradictions
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“Organ transplantation is both lifesaving and death-ridden. The so-called gift of life most often demands a counter gift, a ‘gift of death’ from the donor or his or her next of kin.”
Renée FoxBioethisist
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Behind the death-defying scenes of
transplantation is a life and death
struggle for scarce organs.
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The Gap between Ideology and Practice has widened: Tissues and organs can be bought and
sold in some parts of the world Proposals have been made to allow
financial compensation for donors or their families
There are inequities in access to transplant medicine and in regional distribution of organs
Living donation is at the forefront, but not without risk and unnecessary deaths
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WHAT ARE SOME OF THE PRESSING ETHICAL ISSUES?
Organ Availability Patient Access Prisoners and Transplant Organ Trafficking Medical Errors and Truth Telling Therapeutic Cloning Allocation of Scarce Resources
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BOTTOM LINE
There are not enough organs available to meet the current demand
And there is controversy in how the limited number of organs should be allocated.
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Patients die - -
Ethical issues arise out of
desperation to prevent death
occurring
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How do we Allocate Scarce Resources
Who shall live? Who shall decide?
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Definition of Scarce Resources
Resources or “the use of resources that, because of naturally limited supply or economic constraints, are not readily available to all who need them.”
Council on Ethical & Judicial AffairsAmerican Medical Association
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Traditional medical practice has its foundation in the principles of doing no harm, acting for the good of patients and caring for all of those who come in need
The ethical practice of allocation of scarce resources, may require the thoughtful practitioner to violate these central moral tenets
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Acceptable Criteria for Resource Allocation
1. The likelihood of benefit to the patient2. The impact of treatment in improving
the quality of the patient’s life3. The duration of benefit4. The urgency of the patient’s condition
(i.e.: how close is the patient to death)
5. The amount of resources required for successful treatment
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Each of these five criteria serve to maximize the following three goals of medical treatment:
1. Number of lives saved
2. Number of years of life saved
3. Improvement in quality of life
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Likelihood of BenefitGiving priority to patients with a greater likelihood of benefiting from treatment is necessary for any efficient use of medical resources - Maximizes number of lives saved as well as length and quality of life - Care that has a low likelihood of benefit
must be distinguished from care that is truly
futile (care that cannot be expected to have
any physiologic benefit)
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Change in Quality of Life Benefit to patient will be
maximized if treatment is provided to those who will have the greatest improvement in quality of life
Deciding on a standard definition is dependent on patient individual values
Focus on functional status allows for objective measure of QOL
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Duration of BenefitThe length of time a patient benefits from treatment can, in certain situations, be an appropriate consideration in maximizing overall benefit
- Limited to life expectancy but not an
absolute consideration- Based on patient’s own medical
historyand prognosis, not aggregate
statistics ormembership in a group
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Urgency of NeedPrioritizing patients according to how long they can survive without treatment can help achieve the goal of maximizing the number of lives saved, depending on type of resource involved - Important consideration but must be tempered
with other criterion - Preventing death (by treating urgency first)
should generally be given priority in
allocation decisions- But not if the life saved would be
of extremely poor quality or extremely short
duration
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Amount of Resources Requested
On occasion - assigning higher priority to patients who will need less of a scarce resource maximizes the number of lives saved
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Inappropriate Criteria for Resource Allocation
Often used, but considered ethically unacceptable
1. Ability to pay2. Contribution of the patient to society
(social worth)3. Perceived obstacles to treatment4. Contribution of the patient to his or her own medical condition5. Past use of resources
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Allocation Mechanisms Should Be
- Objective- Flexible- Consistent
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Objectivity
The need for the decision makers not to be personally involved with patients competing for a scarce resource
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Flexibility
Requires decision makers to weigh carefully all relevant facts of a case, and not reflexively apply a blanket rule, such as an age cap to all cases
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Consistency
Requires decision makers to consider the same (appropriate) criteria, interpreted in the same way, to ensure that all decisions are fair to the patients involved
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Three Basic Ethical Concepts in the Allocation of Scarce Resources
- Utility
- Justice
-Autonomy
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Utility
Utility holds that an action or practice tends to be right if it results in as much or more aggregate good than any alternative action or practice
- It requires calculating the net benefit of the use of a resource for each person affected and summing the benefit over the number of total persons affected
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Utility ( Continued )
In rationing scarce medical resources, it is morally imperative to consider medical utility, understood as maximization of the welfare of patients in need of treatment
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JusticeIssues of allocation are, at their core, issues of justice and distributive justice- Being just is consistent with the principles of Moral Right
Equality
Fairness
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Justice ( Continued )
Is a primary concept for the allocation of scarce resources - A concept of fairness, proportionate to
needs, to ensure that all are treated equally - It refers to fairness in the distribution of
benefits and burdens of an allocationprogram
- But - What is fair?
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Justice ( Continued )
“For decisions to be just the process by which the decision is made must be a just one.”
Tony HopeJournal of Medical Ethics, 2001, 27:179
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Equal access to care is based on the concepts of equality and justice, wherein all persons must be able to compete on an equal footing for the opportunities that society offers, however, no rights are absolute
Equal Access to Care
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These rights are conditioned by the presumptions that we, as individuals, have no control over our genetic inheritance, over our susceptibility to disease, or to the way our organs function or the body reacts to certain chemicals and conditions
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Autonomy
Autonomy is seen as both a moral principle and a psychological state
- Persons want to make their own decisions and are, thus, autonomous
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If a resource, such as an organ, becomes available and the person is best-qualified by the principles of utility and justice to receive the resource (organ), and they decide to turn the opportunity down for whatever reason, they shall have exercised the principle of autonomy
Autonomy ( Continued )
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Clinical Considerations in Conflict
The concepts of Utility, Justice and Autonomy are not without
conflict
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Patient survival
Survival of the resource
Psychological state of the patient
Quality of life
Age
Availability of alternative treatments
Utility Must Consider
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Medical urgency of the patient
Likelihood of finding or accessing the resource in the future
Waiting times
First versus repeat resource utilization
Efficacy of the use of the resource
Fairness and Justice Must Consider
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The issue of the right of the individual to refuse the resource
Free exchanges among autonomousindividuals
Allocation of the resource - such as through directed donation
The voluntary behaviors of potential recipients
Autonomy Must Consider
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In Summary Decisions should respect individuality Ethically appropriate criteria must be
used Decision making must be objective,
flexible and consistent Patients need to be informed of
criteria Patients need realistic expectations
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