Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
Anonymous. (1984) Landmark article Aug 5, 1968: A definition of irreversible coma. Report of the Ad Hoc Committee of the Harvard Medical School to examine the definition of brain deathr. Journal of the American Medical Association,255, 677–679.
Ahmed, W., Harris, S. and Brown, E. (1999) Attitudes to organ donation among South Asians in an English high street. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 92, 626–627.
Angell, M. (1988). Ethical imperialism? Ethics in international collaborative clinical research. New England Journal of Medicine, 319, 1081–1083.
Barry, M. (1988). Ethical considerations of human investigation in developing countries: the AIDS dilemma. New England Journal of Medicine, 319, 1083–1086.
Beauchamp, T.L. and Childress, J.F. (1994). Principles of Biomedical Ethics(4th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
Bergsma, J. and Thomasma, D.C. (2000). Autonomy and Clinical Medicine: Renewing the Health Professional Relation with the Patient. Boston/Dordecht/London: Kluwer Academic Publishers,
Bloembergen, W.E., Port, F.K., Mauger, E.A., et al. (1996). Gender discrepancies in living related renal transplant donors and recipients. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 7, 1139–1144.
Bosch, X. (1999). Spain leads world in organ donation and transplantation. Journal of the American Medical Association, 282, 17.
Callahan, D. (1993). The Troubled Dream of Life: Living with Mortality. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Callender, C.O., Bayton, J.A., Yeager, C. and Clark, J.E. (1982). Attitudes among Blacks toward donating kidneys for transplantation: A pilot project. Journal of the National Medical Association, 74, 807–809.
Callender, C.O., Hall, L.E., Yeager, C.L., et al. (1991). Organ donation and Blacks: A critical frontier. New England Journal of Medicine,325, 442–444.
Callender, C.O. and Washington, A.W. (1997). Organ/tissue donation the problem! Education the solution: A review. Journal of the National Medical Association, 89, 689–693.
Campbell, C. (1992). Body, self, and the property paradigm. Hastings Center Report, Sept-October, 34–42.
Caplan, A.L. (1984). Organ procurement: It's not in the cards. Hastings Center Report, October, 9–12.
Carrese, J.A. and Rhodes, L.A. (1995). Western bioethics on the Navajo reservation. Journal of the American Medical Association,274, 826–829.
Chugh, K. S. and Jha, V. (1995). Differences in the care of ESRD patients worldwide: Required resources and future outlook. Kidney International, 48, S7–S13.
Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, American Medical Association. (1994). Strategies for cadaveric organ procurement: Mandated choice and presumed consent. Journal of the American Medical Association, 272, 809–812.
Cowell, A. (1994, October 4). Italy moved by boy's killing and the grace of his parents. The New York Times,p. A1, A6.
Csordas, T.J. (1994). Self and Person. In P.K. Bock (ed.), Handbook of Psychological Anthropology. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group.
Creecy, R.F., Wright, R. and Berg, W.E. (1992). Discriminators of willingness to consider cadaveric kidney donation among black Americans. Social Work in Health Care,18, 93–105.
Dula, A. (1994). African American suspicion of the healthcare system is justified: What do we do about it?” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 3, 347–357.
Evans, R.W. (1990). The Actual and Potential Supply of Organ Donors in the United States. In P. Terasaki (ed.), Clinical Transplants. Los Angeles: UCLA Tissue Typing Laboratory.
Exley, C., Sim, J., Reid, N., et al. (1996). Attitudes and beliefs within the Sikh community regarding organ donation: A pilot study. Social Science and Medicine, 43, 23–28.
Fisher, A., Herzog, L.J.P. and Herzog, E.M. (1996). Five years' experience of an organ donation team in southern Israel. Israel Journal of Medicine and Science, 32, 1112–1119.
Fox, M. and Lipton, H.L. (1983). The decision to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation. New England Journal of Medicine, 309, 607–608.
Fox, M. and Lipton, H.L. (1992). Spare Parts: Organ Replacement in American Society. New York: Oxford University Press.
Fuchs, V. (1968). The growing demand for medical care. New England Journal of Medicine, 179, 190–195.
Gaines, A.D. (1982). Cultural Definitions, the Person, and Behaviour in American Psychiatry. In A. Marsella & G. White (eds.), Cultural Conceptions of Mental Health and Therapy. Dordrecht: D. Reidell.
The Gallop Organization, Inc. (1993). The American Public’s Attitudes Toward Organ Donation and Transplantation. Boston: The Partnership for Organ Donation.
Geertz, C. (1984). ‘From the Native’s Point of View’: On the Nature of Anthropological Understanding. In R.A. Shweder & R.A. LeVine (eds.), Culture Theory: Essays on Mind, Self, and Emotion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gerbino, P. (1995). Opinione Pubblica e Trapianti: I Risultati di Un Indagine. (Public opinion and transplantation: Results of a survey). Rivista Dell Infermiere, 14, 67–70.
Good, B.J. (1994). Medicine, Rationality, and Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Gordon, D.R. (1988). Tenacious Assumptions in Western Medicine. In M. Lock & D.R. Gordon (eds.), Biomedicine Examined. Dordrecht/Boston/London: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Gordon, E.J. (2000). Preventing waste: A ritual analysis of candidate selection for kidney transplantation. Anthropology & Medicine, 7, 351–372.
Gordon, E.J. (2001). “They don't have to suffer for me”: Why dialysis patients refuse offers of living donor kidneys. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 15, 1–22.
Guadagnoli, E., McNamara, P., Evanisko, M.J., et al. (1999). The influence of race on approaching families for organ donation and their decision to donate. American Journal of Public Health, 89, 244–247.
Hallowell, A.I. (1955). The Self in it's Behavioural Environment. Culture, Personality, and Experience. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Hawkins, B.R. (1996). Current status of organ transplantation in Hong Kong. Transplantation Proceedings, 28, 1190–1192.
Hines, P.M. (1991). Death and African-American Culture. In F. Walsh & M. McGoldrick (eds.), Living Beyond Loss: Death in the Family. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
Horton, R.L. and Horton, P.J. (1991). A model of willingness to become a potential organ donor. Social Science and Medicine, 33, 1037–1051.
Hsu, F.L.K. (1985). The Chinese Self. In G. DeVos, A. Marsella, & F. Hsu (eds.), Culture and Self: Asian and Western Perspectives. New York: Tavistock.
Ikels, C. (1997). Kidney failure and transplantation in China. Social Science and Medicine, 44, 1271–1283.
Jones, J. (1981). Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment. New York: The Free Press.
Joralemon, D. (1995). Organ wars: The battle for body parts. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 9, 335–356.
Kaur, M. (1998). Organ donation and transplantation in Singapore. Transplantation Proceedings, 30, 3631–2632.
Kehinde, E.O. (1998). Attitude to cadaveric organ donation in Oman: Preliminary report. Transplantation Proceedings, 30, 3624–3625.
Khajehdehi, P. (1999). Living non-related versus related renal transplantation – its relationship to the social status, age and gender of recipients and donors. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 14, 2621–2624.
Khan, Z. and Randhawa, G. (1999). Informing the UK's South Asian communities on organ donation∈dexorgan donation and Transplantation. EDTNA ERCA J, 25, 12–14.
Kokkedee, W. (1992). Kidney procurement policies in the Eurotransplant region: ‘Opting in’ versus ‘opting out.’ Social Science and Medicine, 35, 177–182.
Kometsi, K.J. and Louw, J. (1999). Deciding on cadaveric organ donation in Black African families. Clinical Transplantation, 13, 473–478.
Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M. (1980). Metaphors We Live By. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Land, W. and Cohen, B. (1992). Postmortem and living organ donation in Europe: Transplant laws and activities. Transplantation Proceedings, 24, 2165–2167.
Lewis, A. and Snell, M. (1986). Increasing kidney transplantation in Britain: The importance of donor cards, public opinion and medical practice. Social Science and Medicine, 22, 1075–1080.
Lewis, A. and Snell, M. (1995). Contesting the natural in Japan: Moral dilemmas and technologies of dying. Culture,Medicine and Psychiatry, 19, 1–38.
Lewis, A. and Snell, M. (2002). Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Lock, M. and Honde, C. (1990). Reaching Consensus About Death: Heart Transplants and Cultural Identity in Japan. In G. Weisz (ed.), Social Science Perspectives on Medical Ethics. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Lock, M. (1996). Deadly Disputes: Ideologies and Brain Death in Japan. In S. Youngner, R. Fox & L. O'Connell (eds.), OrganTransplantation: Meanings and Realities. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
Lopez-Navidad, A., Domingo, P. and Viedma, M.A. (1997). Professional characteristics of the transplant coordinator. Transplantation Proceedings, 29, 1607–1613.
Manninen, D.L. and Evans, R.W. (1985). Public attitudes and behaviour regarding organ donation. Journal of the American Medical Association, 253, 3111–3115.
Marshall, P.A. (2000). Multinational empirical bioethics research. Panel at the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities. October 26–29.
Marshall, P.A. and Daar, A. (2000). Ethical Issues in Human Organ Replacement: A Case Study from India. In L.M. Whiteford & L. Manderson (ed.), Global Health Policy, Local Realities: The Fallacy of the Level Playing Field. Boulder: Lynne Publishers, Inc.
Marshall, P.A. and Koenig, B.A. (1996). Bioethics in Anthropology: Perspectives on Culture, Medicine, and Morality. In C.F. Sargent & T.F. Johnson (eds.), MedicalAnthropology: Contemporary Theory and Method, Revised Edition. Westport: Praeger.
Marshall, P.A., Thomasma, D.C. and Daar, A. (1996). Marketing human organs: The autonomy paradox. Theoretical Medicine, 17, 1–18.
Matesanz, R. (1996). Transplantation and the Mass Media. In R. Matesanz & B. Miranda (eds.), Organ Donation for Transplantation: The Spanish Model. Madrid: Grupo Aula Medica.
Matesanz, R. and Miranda, B. (1996). Organ donation – the role of the media and of public opinion. Nephrology,Dialysis,Transplantation, 11, 2127–2128.
Matesanz, R. and Miranda, B. (1996). Organ Donation for Transplantation: The Spanish Model. Madrid: Grupo Aula Medica.
Matesanz, R., Felipe, C., Fernández, M. and Miranda, B. (1996). Introduction. In R. Matesanz & B. Miranda (eds), Organ Donation for Transplantation: The Spanish Model. Madrid: Grupo Aula Medica.
McConnell, J.R. (1999). The ambiguity about death in Japan: An ethical implication for organ procurement. Journal of Medical Ethics, 25, 322–324.
McGoldrick, M. (1991). Irish families. In F. Walsh & M. McGoldrick (eds.), Living Beyond Loss: Death in the Family. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
McNamara, P., Guadagnoli, E., Evanisko, M.J., et al. (1999). Correlates of support for organ donation∈dexorgan donation among three ethnic groups. Clinical Transplantation, 13, 45–50.
Milford, E.L. (1998). Organ transplantation – barriers, outcomes, and evolving policies. Journal of the American Medical Association, 280, 1184–1185.
Nephrology News and Issues. (1997). The death of an American boy is changing minds on organ donation in Japan. Nephrology News and Issues, 11, no. 1.
Ortner, S.B. (1974). Is Female to Male as Nature is to Culture? In M. Rosaldo & L. Lamphere (eds.), Woman,Culture and Society. Chicago: Stanford University Press.
Ots, T. (1994). The Silenced Body – The Expressive Leib: On the Dialectic of Mind and Life in Chinese Cathartic Healing. In T.J. Csordas (ed.), Embodiment and Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Papagaroufali, E. (1999). Donation of human organs or bodies after death: A cultural phenomenology of ‘flesh’ in the Greek context. Ethos, 27, 283–314.
People Magazine.(1994). The gifts of Nicholas: Italian bandits snuff out an American boy's life but not his legacy of hope. People Magazine, 24, 61–64.
People Magazine. (1996). Gift of Hope. People Magazine, 9, 111–112.
Perez, L.M., Schulman, B., Davis, F., et al. (1988). Organ donation in three major American cities with large Latino and black populations. Transplantation, 46, 553–557.
Perry, H.L. (1993). Mourning and Funeral Customs of African Americans. In K.F. Lundquist & V.J. Nelson (eds.), Ethnic Variations in Dying,Death,and Grief: Diversity in Universality. Washington: Taylor & Francis.
Perry, H.L. (1985). Procurement in Europe and the United States. Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly, 63, 94–126.
Perry, H.L. (1986). In organ transplants, Americans first? Commentary. Hastings Center Report, 16, 23–25.
Randhawa, G. (1998). An exploratory study examining the influence of religion on attitudes towards organ donation∈dexorgan donation among the Asian Population in Luton, UK. Nephrology,Dialysis and Transplantation, 13, 1949–1954.
Reitz, N.N. and Callender, C.O. (1993). Organ donation in the African-American population: A fresh perspective with a simple solution. Journal of the National Medical Association, 85, 353–358.
Rettig, R.A. (1991). Origins of the Medicare Kidney Disease Entitlement: The Social Security Amendments of 1972. In K. Hanna (ed.), Biomedical Politics. Washington: National Academy Press.
Roels, L.,Vanrenterghem, Y., Waer, M., et al. (1990). Effect of a presumed consent law on organ retrieval in Belgium. Transplantation Proceedings, 22, 2078–2079.
Roncone, A.,Vantaggiato, A., Benevenuto, A., et al. (1996). Organ procurement: Experience from a southern Italian region. Transplantation Proceedings, 28, 239–241.
Roseman, M. (1991). Healing Sounds from the Malaysian Rainforest: Temiar Music and Medicine. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Sanner, M. (1994). Attitudes toward organ donation and transplantation: A model for understanding reactions to medical procedures after death. Social Science and Medicine, 38, 1141–1152.
Scheper-Hughes, N. (1990). Mother Love and Child Death in Northeast Brazil. In J. Stigler, R. Shweder & G. Herdt (eds.), Cultural Psychology: Essays on Comparative Human Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Sharp, L.A. (1995). Organ transplantation as a transformative experience: Anthropological insights into the restructuring of the self. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 9, 357–389.
Sherwin, S. (1992). No Longer Patient: Feminist Ethics and Health Care. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Shweder, R.A. and Bourne, E.J. (1984). Does the Concept of Person Vary Cross-Culturally? In A.J. Marsella & G.M. White (eds.), Cultural Conceptions of Mental Health and Therapy. Boston: D. Reidel Publishing Company.
Siminoff, L.A. and Chillag, K. (1999). The fallacy of the ’gift of life.‘ Hastings Center Report, November, 34–41.
Siminoff, L.A., Arnold, R.M., Caplan, A.L., et al. (1995). Public policy governing organ and tissue procurement in the United States. Annals of Internal Medicine, 123, 10–17.
Siminoff, L.A., Gordon, N., Hewlett, J. and Arnold, R.M. (2001). Factors influencing families' consent for donation of solid organs for transplantation. Journal of the American Medical Association, 286, 71–77.
Siminoff, L.A., Lawrence, R.H. and Arnold, R.M. (2003). Comparison of black and white families' experiences and perceptions regarding organ donation requests. Critical Care Medicine, 31, 146–151.
Singh, P., Srivastava, A. and Kumar, A. (1998). Current status of transplant coordination and organ donation∈dexorgan donation in India. Transplantation Proceedings, 20, 3627–3628.
Smith, B. M. (1985). The Metaphorical Basis of Selfhood. In G. DeVos, A. Marsella & F. Hsu (eds.), Culture and Self: Asian and Western Perspectives. New York: Tavistock.
Soh, P. and Lim, S.M.L. (1992). Opting-out law: A model for Asia – The Singapore experience. Transplantation Proceedings, 24, 1337.
Switzer, G.E., Dew, M.A., Butterworth, V.A., et al. (1997). Understanding donors' motivations: A study of unrelated bone marrow donors. Social Science and Medicine, 45, 137–147.
Ubel, P. (1998). Geographic favouritism in liver transplantation – Unfortunate or unfair? New England Journal of Medicine, 339, 1322–1325.
Veatch, R.M. (1984). Autonomy's temporary triumph. Hastings Center Report, October, 38–40.
Verble, M. and Worth, J. (2003). Cultural sensitivity in the donation discussion. Progress in Transplantation 13, 33–37.
Wendler, D. and Dickert, N. (2001). The consent process for cadaveric organ procurement: How does it work? How can it be improved? Journal of the American Medical Association, 285, 329–333.
Woo, K.T. (1992). Social and cultural aspects of organ donation in Asia. Annals of the Academy of Medicine,Singapore, 21, 421–427.
Wright, D.H. (1998). Survey report: Advance directives and donor card effectiveness, 1998. Council on Organ Availability Donor Card Survey, UNOS. UNOS, Richmond, VA. Retrieved July 6, 1998 from http://www.unos.org.
Youngner, S.J., Landefeld, C.S., Coulton, C.J., et al. (1989). ‘Brain death’ and organ retrieval: A cross-sectional survey of knowledge and concepts among health professionals. Journal of the American Medical Association, 261, 15, 2205-2210.
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2008 Springer
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Gordon, E.J. (2008). International Perspective On Organ Donation. In: Autonomy and Human Rights in Health Care. International Library Of Ethics, Law, and the New Medicine, vol 36. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5841-7_17
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5841-7_17
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-5840-0
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-5841-7
eBook Packages: Humanities, Social Sciences and LawPhilosophy and Religion (R0)