Presumed consent for organ donation: a clinically unnecessary and corrupting influence in medicine and politics
John Fabre
DOI: https://doi.org/10.7861/clinmedicine.14-6-567
Clin Med December 2014 John Fabre
AKings College London, London, UK
Roles: professor emeritus
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vol. 14 no. 6 567-571
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- Published online December 2, 2014.
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© 2014 Royal College of Physicians
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Presumed consent for organ donation: a clinically unnecessary and corrupting influence in medicine and politics
John Fabre
Clinical Medicine Dec 2014, 14 (6) 567-571; DOI: 10.7861/clinmedicine.14-6-567
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- ABSTRACT
- The hugely successful reorganisation of organ donation in the UK
- The country with the world's best donation rate does not use presumed consent
- The Department of Health's organ donation taskforce recommended against presumed consent
- The popular appeal of presumed consent
- Will presumed consent provide additional donors?
- Presumed consent has compromised the integrity of the political process in Wales
- Presumed consent will compromise the ethics of clinical practice
- The position of the British Medical Association
- Consent is now the key issue
- The way forward
- References
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