Literature DB >> 18461150

Aged bodies and kinship matters: The ethical field of kidney transplant.

Sharon R Kaufman1, Ann J Russ, Janet K Shim.   

Abstract

The number of kidneys transplanted to people over age 70, both from living and cadaver donors, has increased steadily in the past two decades in the United States. Live kidney donation, on the rise for all age groups, opens up new dimensions of intergenerational relationship and medical responsibility when the transfer of organs is from younger to older people. There is little public knowledge or discussion of this phenomenon, in which the site of ethical judgment and activism about longevity and mortality is one's regard for the body of another and the substance of the body itself is ground for moral consideration about how kinship is "done." The clinic, patient, and patient's family together shape a bond between biological identity and human worth, a demand for an old age marked by somatic pliability and renewability, and a claim of responsibility that merges the "right to live" and "making live." Live kidney transplantation joins genetic, reproductive, and pharmacological forms of social participation as one more technique linking ethics to intervention and the understanding of the arc of human life to clinical opportunity and consumption. Significant in this example is the medicocultural scripting of transplant choice that becomes a high-stakes obligation in which the long-term impacts on generational relations cannot be foreseen.

Entities:  

Year:  2006        PMID: 18461150      PMCID: PMC2373268          DOI: 10.1525/ae.2006.33.1.81

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Ethnol        ISSN: 0094-0496


  21 in total

Review 1.  Age and renal transplantation: an interim analysis.

Authors:  Gabriele Schratzberger; Gert Mayer
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 5.992

2.  Commodified kin: death, mourning, and competing claims on the bodies of organ donors in the United States.

Authors:  L A Sharp
Journal:  Am Anthropol       Date:  2001-03

3.  An organ donor's generosity raises the question of how much is too much.

Authors:  Stephanie Strom
Journal:  N Y Times Web       Date:  2003-08-17

4.  Healthy give organs to dying, raising issues of risk and ethics.

Authors:  D Grady
Journal:  N Y Times Web       Date:  2001-06-24

5.  Choosing death.

Authors:  Nicholas D Kristof
Journal:  N Y Times Web       Date:  2004-07-14

6.  Review of twice dead: organ transplants and the reinvention of death.

Authors:  Sheldon Zink
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 11.229

Review 7.  The biomedicalization of aging: dangers and dilemmas.

Authors:  C L Estes; E A Binney
Journal:  Gerontologist       Date:  1989-10

8.  The sick role and the role of the physician reconsidered.

Authors:  T Parsons
Journal:  Milbank Mem Fund Q Health Soc       Date:  1975

9.  Kidney paired donation and optimizing the use of live donor organs.

Authors:  Dorry L Segev; Sommer E Gentry; Daniel S Warren; Brigitte Reeb; Robert A Montgomery
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2005-04-20       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Kidney transplantation from living-unrelated donors: comparison of outcome with living-related and cadaveric transplants under current immunosuppressive protocols.

Authors:  Archil B Chkhotua; Tirza Klein; Eti Shabtai; Alexander Yussim; Nathan Bar-Nathan; Ezra Shaharabani; Shmariahu Lustig; Eytan Mor
Journal:  Urology       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 2.649

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  5 in total

1.  Medicare, ethics, and reflexive longevity: governing time and treatment in an aging society.

Authors:  Sharon R Kaufman; Lakshmi Fjord
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2011-06

Review 2.  Psychosocial Challenges in Solid Organ Transplantation.

Authors:  Kristin Kuntz; Stephan R Weinland; Zeeshan Butt
Journal:  J Clin Psychol Med Settings       Date:  2015-09

3.  Making longevity in an aging society: linking ethical sensibility and Medicare spending.

Authors:  Sharon R Kaufman
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2009-10

4.  Making longevity in an aging society: linking Medicare policy and the new ethical field.

Authors:  Sharon R Kaufman
Journal:  Perspect Biol Med       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 1.416

5.  Proceedings From the Symposium on Kidney Disease in Older People: Royal Society of Medicine, London, January 19, 2017.

Authors:  Aza Abdulla; Pandora N Wright; Louise E Ross; Hugh Gallagher; Osasuyi Iyasere; Nan Ma; Carol Bartholomew; Karen Lowton; Edwina A Brown
Journal:  Gerontol Geriatr Med       Date:  2017-12-07
  5 in total

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