Journal article
Conscripting organs: "Routine salvaging" or bequest? The historical debate in Britain, 1961-75
M Helen
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences | OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC | Published : 2015
DOI: 10.1093/jhmas/jru005
Abstract
The period 1961-76 was one of marked contestation in Britain about how organs should be obtained from recently deceased people's bodies to transplant into ailing strangers. Most were being removed from hospital patients' corpses without these people's prior consent, under a law that enabled hospital authorities to so authorize the use of a body with one caveat: enquiries should first be made to learn whether the dead person had in life objected to this or whether a family member did. Transplant surgeons argued that this requirement severely hampered their enterprise. They pushed for the 1961 Human Tissue Act to be overturned, to enable them to presume that all patients in British hospitals h..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (project number FT100100762).