Beyond the Officially Sacred, Donor and Believer: Religion and Organ Transplantation
Ignorance
DOI:
10.1016/j.transproceed.2015.06.031
Publication Date:
2015-09-08T22:02:06Z
AUTHORS (1)
ABSTRACT
Religious concerns might represent an important issue when donation for transplantation is discussed. Even if no religious tradition formally forbids organ donation and transplantation, members of the same religious group may have differing and often conflicting opinions in their own interpretation of how their religion encourages and/or supports organ donation and transplantation, as discussed in this article. It also should be considered that even if a religion refuses to define concrete rules about organ donation and transplantation, there are a great number of factors that may influence the decision-making process. Examples may include negative perceptions of the cutting and removal of organs or ignorance about the transplantation system, both of which would influence the decision-making process concerning transplantation. Knowledge of these facts may provide useful information, perhaps increasing transplant numbers.
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