2 results match your criteria: "Australia. ntonti-filippini@jp2institute.org[Affiliation]"
Bioethics
October 2012
John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family, 278 Victoria Parade, PO Box 146, East Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Most organized religions have indicated a level of support for organ donation including the diagnosis of death by the brain criterion. Organ donation is seen as a gift of love and fits within a communitarian ethos that most religions embrace. The acceptance of the determination of death by the brain criterion, where it has been explained, is reconciled with religious views of soul and body by using a notion of integration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed J Aust
March 2011
John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Trade in human tissue in Australia is prohibited by state law, and in ethical guidelines by the National Health and Medical Research Council: National statement on ethical conduct in human research; Organ and tissue donation by living donors: guidelines for ethical practice for health professionals. However, trade in human tissue products is a common practice especially for: reconstructive orthopaedic or plastic surgery; novel human tissue products such as a replacement trachea created by using human mesenchymal stem cells; biomedical research using cell lines, DNA and protein provided through biobanks. Cost pressures on these have forced consideration of commercial models to sustain their operations.
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