Department of Biomedical Ethics, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Transpl Int. 2023 Oct 6;36:11529. doi: 10.3389/ti.2023.11529. eCollection 2023.
In 2018, the Istanbul Declaration stated that organ transplantation via organ trafficking is a crime. Since then, the number of medical institutions in Japan who refuse follow-up care to patients who have undergone unethical organ transplantation overseas has been gradually increasing. Deterring transplant tourism involving organ trafficking is an issue that must be addressed by the government, medical institutions, and individual physicians. The refusal of medical institutions and individual physicians to provide follow-up care after organ transplantation may challenge the idea of the incompatibility thesis; moreover, it may be ethically justified in the context of conscientious objection if it is based on the belief of deterring transplant tourism instead of punitive motives or a reluctance to support a criminal activity. However, conscientious objection based on a belief in fair transplantation care is conditional; according to the compromise approach, it is limited to particular conditions, such as that the patient's medical state does not require urgent care and that the patient is reasonably able to receive follow-up care at another institution.
2018 年,《伊斯坦布尔宣言》指出,器官买卖的器官移植是一种犯罪。此后,日本越来越多的医疗机构拒绝为在海外进行不道德器官移植的患者提供后续护理。打击涉及器官买卖的器官移植旅游是政府、医疗机构和个别医生必须解决的问题。医疗机构和个别医生拒绝为器官移植后的患者提供后续护理,可能会对不相容论点的观点提出挑战;此外,如果基于阻止器官移植旅游的信念,而不是惩罚动机或不愿意支持犯罪活动,那么这在出于良心拒绝对移植旅游的情况下,在伦理上可能是合理的。然而,基于公平移植护理信念的出于良心拒绝对移植旅游的观点是有条件的;根据妥协方法,它仅限于特定条件,例如患者的医疗状况不需要紧急护理,并且患者有能力在另一家机构接受后续护理。