The merit of such policy is that "it satisfies most people's moral intuitions, the people are comfortable with the morality of reciprocity, those who are willing to give should be the first to receive" (Alexander, 2004).
In 2004, ethical issues related to the death and organ donations were discussed by the Kennedy Institute Journal if Ethics in their September issue. The main highlight of the issue has been the proposal, "expanding donation beyond death and non-heart beating organ donation by redefining death and/or providing exceptions to the dead donor rule" (Nancy, 2005). The journal published the claim of an ethicist, which stated that the competent patient has the choice to remove the organs prior to death, provided that the directive was issued in advance. There have been some controversies about the description of the brain death, vegetative state and coma, and do these terms interpret "a living or dead person as an opportunity to change the rules about organ donation" (Nancy, 2005). There has been suggestion by the medical community that EEG test shall be dropped from the hospital's policy on brain death tests, the test is often required for the purpose of organ donation.
Some other proposals have been floated, which have requested change in the organ donation rules, the proposed rules include the requisition of the patient or family consent for donation, "which legally assumes that everyone is automatically...
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