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Life Alliance Organ Recovery Agency

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Title: Life Alliance Organ Recovery Agency


1
Life Alliance Organ Recovery Agency
  • 1-800-255-4483

2
Teaching Ethics in a Multicultural Environment
An Organ Donation Perspective
  • Life Alliance
  • Organ Recovery Agency
  • University of Miami

3
Why is Organ Donation important?
  • -There are more than 87,000 patients listed
    awaiting an organ transplant.
  • -Organ transplants come from Cadaveric donors and
    by Living donors.
  • However, the issue that exists is a Supply
    Demand Problem.

4
Newsroom Facts - UNOS
  • On average, 115 people are added to the nations
    organ transplant waiting list each day ONE
    EVERY 13 MINUTES
  • On average, 66 people receive transplants every
    day from either a living or deceased donor.
  • More than 2,200 children under the age of 18 are
    on the transplant waiting list.

5
State of Donation/Transplantation
6
New Federal Requirements
  • Hospitals must have working relationships
  • with their areas OPO, Tissue and Eye Bank.
  • Hospitals must report ALL deaths and imminent
    deaths to the OPO.
  • Reporting is required for hospital accreditation
    and Medicare reimbursement.
  • All OPOs must audit all deaths in their
    catchment area.

7
Morality
  • The rightness or wrongness of an act or
    thought
  • Widely shared beliefs in a particular culture or
    subculture

8
Ethics
  • The why or the actual underpinning for the act
    or thought.
  • Perspectives that allows one to examine or
    understand something

9
Major Legislation1968 Uniform Anatomical Gift
ActRevised 1987
  • Authorizes the gift of all or part of the after
    death for transplants, research, education, or
    other therapies.
  • Describes who may donate, how to execute the
    donation, and who may receive the gift.

10
  • There is no national registry of organ donors.
    Even if you have indicated your wishes on your
    drivers license or a donor card, be sure you
    have told your family as they will be consulted
    before donation takes place.

11
How does one express voluntary donation wishes?
  • Registries DMV
  • Donor cards
  • Advance directives aka, Living Wills
  • Sharing your thoughts and decisions with your
    family

12
Major Legislation1984 National Organ Transplant
Act
  • Established a national Organ Procurement and
    Transplantation Network (OPTN)
  • Prohibited sale of human organs
  • Established the Scientific Registry of Organ
    transplantation

13
1987Florida Brain Death Law
  • Determination of death must be made by two board
    eligible or certified physicians
  • Brain death is the irreversible cessation of the
    entire brain, including brain stem

14
OPO Responsibilities
  • Evaluation of all potential donors
  • Obtaining family consent
  • Maintain the donor after Brain Death has been
    declared
  • Allocation of the organs
  • Recovery of the organs
  • Aftercare of the donor family

15
Medical Staff Ethical Dilemmas
  • Admitting failure A patient has died
  • Stepping aside
  • Supporting or Obstructing Patient Management

16
South Florida Communities
  • Haitian
  • African American
  • Hispanic

17
Informed Decision to Informed Consent
  • Does a family need to know what organs and
    tissues can be donated?
  • Do they need to know the size of the incision?
  • Do they need to know how the body will look after
    donation?
  • Do they need to know about the various donor
    suitability tests?

18
Pediatric Ethical Considerations
  • What about children who want to be organ donors?
  • What about adolescents between 16 and almost 18
    years old?
  • Can people younger than 18 give consent?

19
Acceptable Donors
  • Severe Head Injuries
  • Cerebral Insults (SAH,SDH,CVA)
  • Primary Brain Tumors
  • Cerebral Anoxia (Near-drowning, Drug ODs,MIs,)
  • Homicides/Suicides
  • Metabolic Disorders (DKA)

20
Contraindications for Organ Donors
  • Age???
  • Malignant Neoplasms (except Primary brain
    tumors)
  • Transmittable diseases (Sepsis, Meningitis, HIV,
    Acute Hepatitis, TB)

21
Contraindications for Organ Donation
  • Current IV Drug abuse
  • CNS Disease (Alzheimers, r/t Mad Cow Disease)
  • Diseases of unknown etiology
  • Sickle Cell (only if in crisis)

22
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23
Brain death vs. Coma?

24
Brain Death CriteriaHarvard Medical School
  • Absence of spontaneous movement and response to
    stimulus
  • Absence of spontaneous respiration
  • Absence of brain stem reflexes
  • Reversible etiology must be considered and
    excluded prior to the diagnosing of Brain Death

25
Brain Death
  • Patient maintained on ventilator, Heart beating
  • Organs are removed in the operating room while
    the patient is maintained on a ventilator.
  • Tissue recovery follows organ donation

26
Cardiac Death
  • Patient has no cardiac or respiratory activity
  • Acceptable donations Tissue Eyes
  • Body must be kept cool before tissues are removed
  • Removal within12 to 24 hours

27
Whats the difference from a coma?
  • Coma entails some lower level of brain electrical
    activity, however absence of any cortical
    activity
  • Coma does NOT equal Brain Death

28
Categories Of Donation
  • Brain Dead Donor
  • Can donate organs, eyes, bone, tissue
  • Has beating heart, on ventilator
  • Cardiac Arrest Donor
  • Eye, bone, tissue only NO organs can be
    donated
  • Donation After Cardiac Death
  • Immediate rescue of organs after cardiac death
    (OPO on Site) Asystole occurs within 30 min of
    extubation

29
Donation after Cardiac Death
  • Informing ICU and OR staff that after
    disconnecting the patient from the respirator
    will result in Cardiac Death.
  • Donation follows pronouncement of patient by the
    attending physician.

30
How Does It Work?
Donors
Recipients
Organ Procurement Agency
Transplant Center
UNOS Organ Center
31
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32
Organ Matching
33
Ethical Issues of Transplant Recipients
  • Retransplantation How many times can a person be
    transplanted when others are also waiting?
  • Prisoners Before and now with todays DNA
    evidence?
  • Non-resident aliens?
  • Multiple Listing Being registered at more than
    one transplant center?

34
Does being a celebrity or being rich influence
listing?
  • UNOS allows for multiple listing for certain
    organs, i.e. Liver, however having available
    money to travel at a moments notice would help an
    individual but not change their place on the
    waiting list.

35
Nurses Role in Donation
  • Early identification
  • Referral of potential donors to OPO
  • Support the families right to donate
  • Assist in donor management
  • Comfort grieving families

36
Goals of Donor Care
  • Maintain cardiac output
  • Maintain tissue perfusion
  • Maintain fluid and electrolyte balance
  • Ensure adequate ventilation and pulmonary
    stability
  • Prevent infection
  • Control diabetes Insipidus
  • Regulate body temperature

37
The Medical Examiner
  • The Medical examiner has legal jurisdiction over
    the body, in the county where the injury
    occurred.
  • Being a Medical Examiners Case does not prevent
    a patient from being an organ donor.

38
Errors to Avoid With Families
  • Giving false hope
  • Using highly technical medical terms
  • Approaching too early, not allowing the death to
    be accepted
  • Being stone cold, uncaring, abrupt or pompous

39
Errors to avoid with families
  • Showing an unwillingness to spend time to answer
    questions
  • Giving the option of organ donation before
    knowing if the patient is a candidate

40
Jackson Liver Transplant Recipient
41
Liver, stomach, pancreas, small bowel and piece
of colon recipient
42
Liver and small bowel recipient
43
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44
heart recipient
45
Trine Liver Recipient
46
Oneisha and Missick Liver Transplant Recipients
47
Erik, heart transplant
48
Life Alliance Organ Recovery Agency
1-800-255-4483
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