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Elective ventilation to facilitate organ donation in infants with anencephaly: perinatal professionals' views and an ethical analysis.

作者信息

Jivraj Alisa, Scales Angie, Brierley Joe

机构信息

St Georges Medical School, University of London, London, UK.

Critical Care Unit, Great Ormond Children's Hospital, London, UK.

出版信息

Acta Paediatr. 2016 May;105(5):494-8. doi: 10.1111/apa.13281. Epub 2016 Jan 8.

Abstract

AIM

Following the elective ventilation and referral for organ donation of an infant with anencephaly, we sought local perinatal professionals' views of this practice.

METHODS

Anonymous online survey: demographics, ethical viewpoints and potential public/maternal perceptions (standard 5-part Likert scale and free text).

DEMOGRAPHICS

49 replies (38 female): 4 obstetricians, 14 neonatologists, 6 foetal clinicians, 23 nurses, 1 anaesthetist and 1 reproductive specialist.

EXPERIENCE

0.5-33 years (average 12). Twenty-one had experience of anencephalic delivery, and 10 reported pregnancy continued for religious reasons.

ETHICS

(i) 73% thought anencephalic donation acceptable, of which 64% supported elective ventilation, 20% neutral and 16% disagreed. (ii) Provision of treatments not in infant's strict best interest to facilitate donation: 22% strongly agreed, 36% agreed, 33% neutral and 9% disagreed. (iii) Accept ventilation to permit donation if societal benefit: 53% agreed, 33% neutral and 13% disagreed. (iv) Public opinion: 59% disagreed anencephalic donation would harm public opinion about donation and 19% agreed.

CONCLUSION

We found a supportive local environment for donation in the setting of anencephaly, including support for elective ventilation. Given this, and our ethical analysis, we recommend provision of organ donation information as part of palliative care counselling for women carrying a foetus with a condition likely to be fatal in infancy.

摘要

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