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1.
Front Dement ; 2: 1287236, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39081971

ABSTRACT

Background: Organ donation after euthanasia (ODE) has been performed over 100 times in the Netherlands, primarily involving patients suffering from a neurodegenerative or psychiatric disease. In recent years, the number of euthanasia cases related to dementia has increased in the Netherlands, with some patients living with dementia expressing a wish for organ donation after euthanasia. Methods: We describe a unique case of a 67-year-old female diagnosed with primary progressive aphasia as part of frontotemporal dementia who requested and underwent organ donation after euthanasia. Results: The patient had expressed her explicit wishes for both euthanasia and organ donation, which were discussed with her family physician, the Euthanasia Expertise Center (EE), and an organ donation coordinator. The patient was informed that to proceed with ODE, she should still be capable of voicing a voluntary and well-considered request for organ donation. The legally required euthanasia assessment procedure was carefully completed before ODE. Multiple healthcare professionals assessed the patient's competence, voluntariness, and unbearable suffering. Thereafter the patient's ODE request was granted, and both lungs and kidneys were successfully donated and transplanted. Post hoc analysis confirmed that all due diligence criteria for euthanasia were met, and the patient's relatives received an anonymous letter of gratitude from one of the organ recipients. Conclusions: This unique case demonstrates that ODE is feasible from medical, ethical, and legal perspectives in patients living with dementia. This case highlights several aspects essential to enable an ODE request by a patient living with dementia to be granted, such as the role of the physician performing euthanasia, the relevance of the decision-making capacity of the patient, the presence of an advance directive, and the involvement of and support by relatives and caregivers. However, several unresolved ethical issues surrounding ODE in patients with dementia, especially in patients with advanced stages of dementia, warrant further exploration, including the timing of discussing organ donation after the initial euthanasia request.

2.
Zorgvisie ; 50(7): 19, 2020.
Article in Dutch | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33071601
4.
J Heart Lung Transplant ; 38(2): 111-113, 2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30197210

ABSTRACT

Euthanasia is categorically prohibited in almost all countries throughout the world. In Belgium and the Netherlands, combining euthanasia and subsequent organ donation in a so-called donation after circulatory-death (DCD) procedure is feasible on legal and medical grounds, and is increasingly gaining social and ethical acceptance. However, heart transplantation after DCD is currently not performed in Belgium and the Netherlands after euthanasia due to concerns surrounding the prolonged warm ischemia time associated with DCD and its effect on subsequent heart function. A number of patients who undergo euthanasia explicitly express their wish to donate their organs in a "living organ donation" procedure, which then causes death. Assuming that euthanasia is permitted, as expressed in Dutch and Belgian legislation, this exploratory article addresses whether it is legally and ethically sound to donate organs, especially the heart, as a living donor and to perform euthanasia in the same procedure in a patient who fulfills the due diligence requirements for euthanasia. Organ donation euthanasia (ODE) would then cause death by the associated surgical procedure, and in addition would improve the quality of the other donated organs, a procedure that would fully respect the patient's autonomy.


Subject(s)
Euthanasia/legislation & jurisprudence , Living Donors/ethics , Organ Transplantation/legislation & jurisprudence , Tissue and Organ Procurement/legislation & jurisprudence , Belgium , Humans , Netherlands , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Warm Ischemia/legislation & jurisprudence
6.
J Med Ethics ; 42(8): 486-9, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27012736

ABSTRACT

Organ donation after euthanasia has been performed more than 40 times in Belgium and the Netherlands together. Preliminary results of procedures that have been performed until now demonstrate that this leads to good medical results in the recipient of the organs. Several legal aspects could be changed to further facilitate the combination of organ donation and euthanasia. On the ethical side, several controversies remain, giving rise to an ongoing, but necessary and useful debate. Further experiences will clarify whether both procedures should be strictly separated and whether the dead donor rule should be strictly applied. Opinions still differ on whether the patient's physician should address the possibility of organ donation after euthanasia, which laws should be adapted and which preparatory acts should be performed. These and other procedural issues potentially conflict with the patient's request for organ donation or the circumstances in which euthanasia (without subsequent organ donation) traditionally occurs.


Subject(s)
Euthanasia , Informed Consent/ethics , Informed Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Tissue Donors/ethics , Tissue Donors/legislation & jurisprudence , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/legislation & jurisprudence , Age Factors , Attitude of Health Personnel , Belgium/epidemiology , Euthanasia/ethics , Euthanasia/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Netherlands/epidemiology , Personal Autonomy , Policy Making , Public Policy
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