Where are we heading? The legality of human body transplants examined.

Issues Law Med

Department of Philosphy and Department of Community and Family Medicine, Howard University, Washington, DC, USA; Bulgarian Center for Bioethics, Sofia, Bulgaria.

Published: April 2019

In this article the authors examine the legality of human body transplantation under the current state of medical knowledge. The article first analyzes under what conditions an experimental medical procedure may be legitimately performed under international and national law. Then it examines the legal requirements for prior ethics approval and considers the possible civil and criminal liability claims and disciplinary sanctions that may arise if such a procedure would fail. Subsequently, it applies this analysis to investigate whether body transplants would currently be legally allowed. The authors conclude that it is very unlikely that prior ethics approval would be obtained, and emphasize that physicians are likely to be found liable for medical malpractice if body transplantation is performed. If body transplantation results in the death of the patient, the physicians involved would run a considerable risk of being held criminally liable for negligent homicide. The participating physicians also risk severe disciplinary sanctions for professional misconduct, with a real possibility that they will be suspended or even banned from medical practice for life.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

body transplantation
12
legality human
8
human body
8
body transplants
8
prior ethics
8
ethics approval
8
disciplinary sanctions
8
body
5
heading? legality
4
transplants examined
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!