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Ethical, psychological and social un/certainties in the face of deemed consent for organ donation in England

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Ethical, psychological and social un/certainties in the face of deemed consent for organ donation in England. / Machin, Laura; Wrench, Elizabeth; Cooper, Jessie et al.
In: Health Care Analysis, Vol. 32, No. 4, 31.12.2024, p. 272-289.

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Machin L, Wrench E, Cooper J, Dixon H, Wilkinson M. Ethical, psychological and social un/certainties in the face of deemed consent for organ donation in England. Health Care Analysis. 2024 Dec 31;32(4):272-289. Epub 2024 Sept 24. doi: 10.1007/s10728-024-00492-0

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@article{46850da8c5484b1a882aae2438bbf9e0,
title = "Ethical, psychological and social un/certainties in the face of deemed consent for organ donation in England",
abstract = "Deemed consent legislation for deceased organ donation was introduced in England in 2020, and is considered a vital part of the new UK NHS Blood and Transplant{\textquoteright}s 10-year strategy to increase consent for organ donation. Despite the legislation containing safeguards to protect the public, the introduction of deemed consent creates ethical, psychological and social un/certainties for healthcare professionals in their practice. In this paper, we offer insights into healthcare professionals{\textquoteright} perspectives on deemed consent, drawn from interview data with 24 healthcare professionals in an NHS Trust in England, prior to the introduction of the legislation. Whilst participants supported deemed consent in principle, they were concerned that it would present a threat to the nature of donation as a {\textquoteleft}gift{\textquoteright}; the notion of informed consent (or non-consent); and the autonomy of donors, their relatives, and their own roles as health professionals, posing dilemmas for practice. We argue that healthcare professionals present themselves as guardians of potential (non)donors and thus as having ethics and integrity in their own practice. We draw conclusions around the values and principles that matter to healthcare professionals when contemplating consent in deceased donation which will be useful for organ donation committees and ethics forums. ",
author = "Laura Machin and Elizabeth Wrench and Jessie Cooper and Heather Dixon and Mark Wilkinson",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1007/s10728-024-00492-0",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "272--289",
journal = "Health Care Analysis",
issn = "1065-3058",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ethical, psychological and social un/certainties in the face of deemed consent for organ donation in England

AU - Machin, Laura

AU - Wrench, Elizabeth

AU - Cooper, Jessie

AU - Dixon, Heather

AU - Wilkinson, Mark

PY - 2024/12/31

Y1 - 2024/12/31

N2 - Deemed consent legislation for deceased organ donation was introduced in England in 2020, and is considered a vital part of the new UK NHS Blood and Transplant’s 10-year strategy to increase consent for organ donation. Despite the legislation containing safeguards to protect the public, the introduction of deemed consent creates ethical, psychological and social un/certainties for healthcare professionals in their practice. In this paper, we offer insights into healthcare professionals’ perspectives on deemed consent, drawn from interview data with 24 healthcare professionals in an NHS Trust in England, prior to the introduction of the legislation. Whilst participants supported deemed consent in principle, they were concerned that it would present a threat to the nature of donation as a ‘gift’; the notion of informed consent (or non-consent); and the autonomy of donors, their relatives, and their own roles as health professionals, posing dilemmas for practice. We argue that healthcare professionals present themselves as guardians of potential (non)donors and thus as having ethics and integrity in their own practice. We draw conclusions around the values and principles that matter to healthcare professionals when contemplating consent in deceased donation which will be useful for organ donation committees and ethics forums.

AB - Deemed consent legislation for deceased organ donation was introduced in England in 2020, and is considered a vital part of the new UK NHS Blood and Transplant’s 10-year strategy to increase consent for organ donation. Despite the legislation containing safeguards to protect the public, the introduction of deemed consent creates ethical, psychological and social un/certainties for healthcare professionals in their practice. In this paper, we offer insights into healthcare professionals’ perspectives on deemed consent, drawn from interview data with 24 healthcare professionals in an NHS Trust in England, prior to the introduction of the legislation. Whilst participants supported deemed consent in principle, they were concerned that it would present a threat to the nature of donation as a ‘gift’; the notion of informed consent (or non-consent); and the autonomy of donors, their relatives, and their own roles as health professionals, posing dilemmas for practice. We argue that healthcare professionals present themselves as guardians of potential (non)donors and thus as having ethics and integrity in their own practice. We draw conclusions around the values and principles that matter to healthcare professionals when contemplating consent in deceased donation which will be useful for organ donation committees and ethics forums.

U2 - 10.1007/s10728-024-00492-0

DO - 10.1007/s10728-024-00492-0

M3 - Journal article

VL - 32

SP - 272

EP - 289

JO - Health Care Analysis

JF - Health Care Analysis

SN - 1065-3058

IS - 4

ER -