Journal article
Crossing the Rubicon: Death in 'The Year of the Transplant'
H MacDonald
Medical History | CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1017/mdh.2016.103
Abstract
How death should be measured was a subject of intense debate during the late 1960s, and one in which transplant surgeons had a particular interest. Legislation required a doctor to first pronounce 'extinct' the patients from whom 'spare parts' were sought for grafting. But transplant surgeons increasingly argued the moment of death was less important than was the moment of establishing that a patient was beyond the point of no return in dying, at which time she or he should be passed to the transplant team. This raised concerns that people identified as being a potential source of organs might not be adequately cared for in their own right. In 1968 the World Medical Association issued an int..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (project number 100100762). It has benefited from the questions, comments and suggestions made by the anonymous reviewers for Medical History, and from skilful research assistance provided by Dr Anna MacDonald and Dr Caitlin Mahar.