Pediatric organ transplantation

Organ transplantation raises a host of complex ethical issues. Transplantation often occurs in patients who are seriously ill and may die without the therapy. It frequently takes place in the setting of scarcity, where the demand for transplanted organs outstrips supply. Decisions about who can dona...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wilkinson, D
Other Authors: Lafollette, H
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
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author Wilkinson, D
author2 Lafollette, H
author_facet Lafollette, H
Wilkinson, D
author_sort Wilkinson, D
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description Organ transplantation raises a host of complex ethical issues. Transplantation often occurs in patients who are seriously ill and may die without the therapy. It frequently takes place in the setting of scarcity, where the demand for transplanted organs outstrips supply. Decisions about who can donate organs (including the definition of death), have implications for the availability of organs for transplantation. In some circumstances, there can be a trade-off between the interests of donors and recipients. Ethical questions relating to pediatric organ transplantation largely overlap with those in adults. In this entry, I will focus on the most distinctive ethical questions relating to children as donors or as recipients of transplanted solid organs. I concentrate on young children, since the ethical considerations in competent adolescents or older children are very similar to those in adult transplantation.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6a667f05-78f6-4a53-bf96-ba90aa5413ae2023-06-16T10:42:10ZPediatric organ transplantationBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:6a667f05-78f6-4a53-bf96-ba90aa5413aeEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2021Wilkinson, DLafollette, HOrgan transplantation raises a host of complex ethical issues. Transplantation often occurs in patients who are seriously ill and may die without the therapy. It frequently takes place in the setting of scarcity, where the demand for transplanted organs outstrips supply. Decisions about who can donate organs (including the definition of death), have implications for the availability of organs for transplantation. In some circumstances, there can be a trade-off between the interests of donors and recipients. Ethical questions relating to pediatric organ transplantation largely overlap with those in adults. In this entry, I will focus on the most distinctive ethical questions relating to children as donors or as recipients of transplanted solid organs. I concentrate on young children, since the ethical considerations in competent adolescents or older children are very similar to those in adult transplantation.
spellingShingle Wilkinson, D
Pediatric organ transplantation
title Pediatric organ transplantation
title_full Pediatric organ transplantation
title_fullStr Pediatric organ transplantation
title_full_unstemmed Pediatric organ transplantation
title_short Pediatric organ transplantation
title_sort pediatric organ transplantation
work_keys_str_mv AT wilkinsond pediatricorgantransplantation