| Literature DB >> 29067599 |
Mohamed Y Rady1, Joseph L Verheijde2.
Abstract
Death is defined in the Quran with a single criterion of irreversible separation of the ruh (soul) from the body. The Quran is a revelation from God to man, and the primary source of Islamic knowledge. The secular concept of death by neurological criteria, or brain death, is at odds with the Quranic definition of death. The validity of this secular concept has been contested scientifically and philosophically. To legitimize brain death for the purpose of organ donation and transplantation in Muslim communities, Chamsi-Pasha and Albar (concurring with the US President's Council on Bioethics) have argued that irreversible loss of capacity for consciousness and breathing (apneic coma) in brain death defines true death in accordance with Islamic sources. They have postulated that the absence of nafs (personhood) and nafas (breath) in apneic coma constitutes true death because of departure of the soul (ruh) from the body. They have also asserted that general anesthesia is routine in brain death before surgical procurement. Their argument is open to criticism because: (1) the ruh is described as the essence of life, whereas the nafs and nafas are merely human attributes; (2) unlike true death, the ruh is still present even with absent nafs and nafas in apneic coma; and (3) the routine use of general anesthesia indicates the potential harm to brain-dead donors from surgical procurement. Postmortem general anesthesia is not required for autopsy. Therefore, the conclusion must be that legislative enforcement of nonconsensual determination of neurological (brain) death and termination of life-support and medical treatment violates the religious rights of observant Muslims.Entities:
Keywords: Brain death; Disorders of consciousness; End-of-life care; Islam; Neuroscience; Organ donation; Religion
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29067599 PMCID: PMC5854742 DOI: 10.1007/s10943-017-0512-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Relig Health ISSN: 0022-4197
Description of the phenomenon of death in the Quran
| The characteristics of the phenomenon of death | The criteria in the determination of death |
|---|---|
| • God created the phenomenon of death | • Ruh (soul) has separated irreversibly from the body |
The Quran is a revelation from God to man and the primary source of Islamic knowledge
Fig. 1“Human death is a singular phenomenon. The dying process occurs in stages over time. There is a gradual loss of capacity for somatic integration of the whole body because of an irreversible cessation of all vital and biological functions including circulation, respiration (controlled by the brainstem), and consciousness. The irreversibility of cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions is interlinked to the onset of whole brain necrosis. The loss of capacity for consciousness is irreversible when the necrosis of the whole brain, including the brainstem, is complete”. “There is no accurate clinical test to ascertain the absence of self and/or environmental awareness in unresponsive patients following severe brain injuries. Arbitrary neurological and circulatory criteria redefining human death enable heart-beating and non-heart-beating procurement of transplantable organs, respectively. Scientifically flawed criteria of death can harm donors because procurement procedures are performed without general anaesthesia” (Rady and Verheijde 2014). Figure reproduced from source (Verheijde et al. 2009), under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
The 2014 US procurement and transplant charges
| Type of organ(s) transplant | Total estimated number of transplants ( | Estimated billed charges per transplanta ($) | Total billed chargesc ($) | Procurement charges per transplantb ($) | Total procurement chargesd ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart | 2320 | 1,242,200 | 2,881,904,000 | 97,200 | 225,504,000 |
| Intestine | 51 | 1,547,200 | 78,907,200 | 92,100 | 4,697,100 |
| Kidney | 15,978 | 334,300 | 5,341,445,400 | 84,400 | 1,348,543,200 |
| Liver | 5723 | 739,100 | 4,229,869,300 | 95,000 | 543,685,000 |
| Lung-single | 681 | 785,000 | 534,585,000 | 90,200 | 61,426,200 |
| Lung-double | 1220 | 1,037,700 | 1,265,994,000 | 129,700 | 158,234,000 |
| Pancreas | 149 | 317,500 | 47,307,500 | 93,800 | 13,976,200 |
| Heart–lung | 29 | 2,313,600 | 67,094,400 | 168,700 | 4,892,300 |
| Intestine and other organs | 49 | 1,844,700 | 90,390,300 | 236,400 | 11,583,600 |
| Kidney–heart | 85 | 1,840,300 | 156,425,500 | 136,000 | 11,560,000 |
| Kidney–pancreas | 773 | 558,600 | 431,797,800 | 123,300 | 95,310,900 |
| Liver–kidney | 471 | 1,190,300 | 560,631,300 | 161,500 | 76,066,500 |
| Other–multi-organ | 38 | 1,620,800 | 61,590,400 | 177,600 | 6,748,800 |
| Total sum | 27,567 | 15,747,942,100 | 2,562,227,800 |
Data source is the 2014 US organ and tissue transplant cost estimates and discussion report (Hanson and Bentley 2014)
Sum of procurement charges for a potential brain-dead donor = heart + lung-double + 2 × kidney + Liver + pancreas + intestine = [97,200 + 129,700 + (2 × 84,400) + 95,000 + 93,800 + 92,100] = $676,600
aEstimated billed charges per transplant: The charges included 30-day pre-transplant medical services, hospital transplant admission, organ procurement, transplant physician service, 180 days post-transplant follow-up, and outpatient immunosuppressants and other drugs associated with the transplant patient
bProcurement charges per transplant: The charges for organ or tissue recovery services included retrieval, preservation, transportation, and other acquisition costs. The charges included donor management in the intensive care unit
cTotal billed charges = number of transplant recipients × estimated billed charges per transplant
dTotal procurement charges = number of transplant recipients × procurement charges per transplant