Department of Economics, University of Bologna, Piazza Scaravilli, 2, 40126 Bologna, Italy.
Eur J Health Econ. 2012 Feb;13(1):29-38. doi: 10.1007/s10198-010-0277-8. Epub 2010 Sep 17.
This article purports to advance the literature on the impact of presumed consent laws on deceased donation rates by examining the interactions between a presumed consent legal regime and other customs and institutions, using data on health expenditure, death rates caused by cerebro vascular diseases, motor vehicle accidents and homicides, legislation, legal systems, family consent, civil rights and liberties and donor registry systems, for 24 countries over a 14-year period. Countries in which presumed consent is enacted exhibit significantly higher donation rates only if family consent is routinely sought and a combined registry is maintained or neither practice is administered. Otherwise, presumed consent legislation does not have a sizeable impact on deceased donation rates.
本文旨在通过研究假定同意法律制度与其他习俗和制度之间的相互作用,推进关于假定同意法律对死者捐赠率影响的文献。为此,我们使用了 24 个国家 14 年来的卫生支出、脑血管疾病、机动车事故和凶杀导致的死亡率、立法、法律制度、家庭同意、公民权利和自由以及捐赠者登记系统的数据。只有在常规征求家庭同意并维护联合登记册或不进行任何一种做法的情况下,实行假定同意的国家的捐赠率才会显著提高。否则,假定同意立法对死者捐赠率没有显著影响。