| Literature DB >> 26940813 |
Mohamed Y Rady1, Joseph L Verheijde2.
Abstract
There is a trend of recruiting faith leaders at mosques to overcome religious barriers to organ donation, and to increase donor registration among Muslims. Commentators have suggested that Muslims are not given enough information about organ donation in religious sermons or lectures delivered at mosques. Corrective actions have been recommended, such as funding campaigns to promote organ donation, and increasing the availability of organ donation information at mosques. These actions are recommended despite published literature expressing safety concerns (i.e., do no harm) in living and end-of-life organ donation. Living donors require life-long medical follow-up and treatment for complications that can appear years later. Scientific and medical controversies persist regarding the international guidelines for death determination in end-of-life donation. The medical criteria of death lack validation and can harm donors if surgical procurement is performed without general anesthesia and before biological death. In the moral code of Islam, the prevention of harm holds precedence over beneficence. Moral precepts described in the Quran encourage Muslims to be beneficent, but also to seek knowledge prior to making practical decisions. However, the Quran also contains passages that demand honesty and truthfulness when providing information to those who are seeking knowledge. Currently, information is limited to that which encourages donor registration. Campaigning for organ donation to congregations in mosques should adhere to the moral code of complete, rather than selective, disclosure of information. We recommend as a minimal standard the disclosure of risks, uncertainties, and controversies associated with the organ donation process.Entities:
Keywords: Death; Do-no-harm principle; End-of-life care; Living donors; Organ donation; Religion
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26940813 PMCID: PMC4977327 DOI: 10.1007/s10730-016-9302-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HEC Forum ISSN: 0956-2737
The minimal standard of prerequisite information that should be disclosed in organ donation campaigns at mosques and in Muslim communities
| Prerequisite information in living donation | Prerequisite information in end-of-life donation |
|---|---|
| Comprehensive pre-donation physical, psychological, social and financial evaluation before approval | Address conflicts between end-of-life care and perimortem organ preservation |
| Enrollment in a national living-donor registry for life-long medical follow-up | Disclose the scientific, medical, and religious controversies about the determination of death |
| Reliable data collection about preexisting health risk factors and subsequent complications in donors | Explain that transplantable organs will be procured before biological death |
| Life-long screening for development of delayed post-donation physical and psychosocial complications | Describe that organ procurement is performed without general anesthesia |
| Availability and affordability of healthcare resources for treatment of post-donation short and long-term physical consequences | Expand on the conflict between donation-related procedures and religious rituals at the end of life |
| Provision of post-donation psychological and psychiatric counselling | |
| Practical strategies for mitigating post-donation financial consequences and economic hardship | |
| Independent tracking and comprehensive reporting of outcome measures in all donors |