Roberts L W, Nolte K B, Warner T D, McCarty T, Rosenbaum L S, Zumwalt R
Department of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA.
Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2000 Oct;124(10):1485-95. doi: 10.5858/2000-124-1485-POTEAO.
Forensic pathologists face difficult moral questions in their practices each day. Consistent ethical and legal guidelines for autopsy tissue use extending beyond usual clinical and legal imperatives have not been developed in this country.
To obtain the perceptions of medical examiners regarding the ethical acceptability of autopsy tissue use for research and education.
A written, self-report questionnaire was developed and piloted by a multidisciplinary team at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. All individuals who attended a platform presentation at the National Association of Medical Examiners Annual Meeting in September 1997 were invited to participate.
Ninety-one individuals completed the survey (40% of all conference registrants and approximately 75% of presentation attendees). Sixty-three percent of respondents had encountered an ethical dilemma surrounding autopsy tissue use, and one third reported some professional ethics experience. Perspectives varied greatly concerning the ethical acceptability of using autopsy tissues to demonstrate or practice techniques (eg, intubation, brachial plexus dissection) and of fulfilling requests to supply varying kinds and quantities of tissues for research and education. Most respondents indicated that consent by family members was important in tissue use decisions. Respondents agreed on the importance of basic values in education and research, such as integrity, scientific or educational merit, and formal institutional approval of a project. Characteristics of the decedent did not influence decisions to release tissues, except when the individual had died from a mysterious or very rare illness. Attributes of medical examiners, with the exception of sex, also did not consistently predict responses.
Significant diversity exists in beliefs among medical examiners regarding perceptions of the appropriate use of autopsy tissues for education and research. There is need for further inquiry and dialogue so that enduring policy solutions regarding human tissue use for education and research may be developed.
法医病理学家在日常工作中面临着棘手的道德问题。我国尚未制定超出常规临床和法律要求的尸检组织使用的统一伦理和法律准则。
了解法医对尸检组织用于研究和教育的伦理可接受性的看法。
新墨西哥大学阿尔伯克基分校的一个多学科团队编制了一份书面的自我报告问卷并进行了预试验。邀请了所有参加1997年9月全国法医协会年会平台展示的人员参与。
91人完成了调查(占所有会议注册者的40%,约占展示会参会者的75%)。63%的受访者曾遇到过与尸检组织使用相关的伦理困境,三分之一的人报告有一些职业道德方面的经历。对于使用尸检组织来演示或练习技术(如插管、臂丛神经解剖)以及满足提供不同种类和数量的组织用于研究和教育的请求的伦理可接受性,观点差异很大。大多数受访者表示,家庭成员的同意在组织使用决策中很重要。受访者一致认为教育和研究中的基本价值观很重要,如诚信、科学或教育价值以及项目获得正式机构批准。死者的特征不会影响组织释放的决定,除非个体死于神秘或非常罕见的疾病。除性别外,法医的属性也不能始终如一地预测回答情况。
法医在对尸检组织用于教育和研究的适当使用的看法上存在显著的观念差异。需要进一步探究和对话,以便制定关于人体组织用于教育和研究的持久政策解决方案。