[Dean's World] Ron Coleman: Winter harvest
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Fri Dec 8 11:02:58 EST 2006
Posted by Ron Coleman:
Winter harvest
http://www.deanesmay.com/posts/1165593771.shtml
Rabbi Avi Shafran passes this along about our increasing numbness
about life and death, even as advances in science make it increasingly
clear that we don't know the difference between the two. It's
reprinted with permission of Am Echad Resources. I've added links.
In a forthcoming book, [1]Final Exam: A Surgeonâs Reflections on
Mortality, [2]Dr. Pauline W. Chen [3]writes about the many
operations she performed on brain-dead patients for the purpose of
procuring, or âharvesting,â their organs for transplantation. âThey
all,â she writes, âseemed remarkably alive.â
This past fall, the prestigious journal Science published a
[4]report on a young woman who, after a devastating car accident,
was declared vegetative. For five months, she showed no signs of
awareness whatsoever. Scientists, though, decided to put her in a
[5]Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanner, a machine that
tracks blood flow to different parts of the brain and that was only
developed a few years ago. When they asked her to imagine things
like playing tennis and walking through her home, the scan lit up
with telltale patterns of language, movement and navigation
indistinguishable from those produced by the brains of healthy,
conscious people. The reportâs authors, while stressing that the
patient may still be classified as âunconscious,â conclude
nonetheless that she has a ârich mental life.â
Ten years earlier, a patient like the young woman would have been
assumed, for all practical intents, to be â effectively, if perhaps
not legally â lifeless. Only the development of a new diagnostic
technology has now rendered her more obviously alive. Itâs hard not
to wonder what technologies might one day yet be developed â or
what aspects of consciousness might forever elude scientific
instrumentation.
The acronym DCD might be mistaken for some new medium of music
reproduction but in fact refers to âdonation after cardiac deathâ â
the procurement of organs from people whose hearts have stopped,
even if their brains may still be functioning. Such procedures have
taken place in many countries, despite the fact that the cessation
of heartbeat is not necessarily irreversible. Even some patients
whose hearts did not respond to cardiac resuscitation, it is well
documented, have âcome back to lifeâ â in one case after the lapse
of a full seven minutes, certainly sufficient time for harvesting a
vital organ or two.
The driving force behind the scramble to define death âto the
instantâ is clearly the worldwide shortage of organs for
transplant. This past summer, doctors at the [6]World Transplant
Congress in Boston were told how the pool of available organs in
the United States could increase by up to 20% if DCD were adopted
more widely.
([7]show)
What does Judaism have to say about all this? Saving a life is a most
weighty imperative, to be sure, but Jewish religious law, or halacha,
does not permit one life to be taken to save the life of another â no
matter how diminished the âqualityâ of the life of the former, no
matter how great the potential of the life of the latter.
Halacha requires that death be clearly established, and does not
permit any action that might hasten the death of a person in extremis.
Harvesting organs after any cessation of heart function that might not
be permanent would be forbidden.
Unrelated to DCD is âbrain deathâ â a diagnosis of irreversible
cessation of all brain function, which modern medicine and secular law
consider sufficient to permit the âharvestingâ of organs before
removal of life-support. What does Jewish law have to say about âbrain
deathâ? Can a patient with no discernable brain activity but whose
heart continues to beat be considered a corpse?
Some rabbis vote yea on that question. And a recent New York Times
[8]8/nyregion/18organs.html?ex=1165726800&en=8d57cf1c7e4ea457&ei=5070"
>article about a conference organized by the âHalachic Organ Donor
Society
,â an organization advocating increased organ donation from
halacha-observant Jews, referred to ânear unanimity among rabbis on
the criteria for organ donationâ â presumably referring to the next
paragraphâs citation of the chief Sephardic rabbi of the Israeli city
of Tzfat, whose criterion is brain death.
But many, and considerably more prominent in the world of halachic
discourse, are the rabbinical authorities who do not agree. They
include the late [9]Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach, who was renowned as
one of our generationâs most [10]authoritative halachic decisors, as
well as [11]Rabbi Yosef Elyashiv, considered by many Jews to be the
most authoritative authority of Jewish law today. Some leading
scholars at Yeshiva University too, like [12]Rabbi Herschel Schachter
and [13]Rabbi J. David Bleich, concur with those decisors.
In her book, Dr. Chen writes about her â83rd procurementâ when the
brain-dead body she sliced open for its organs was that of a young
Asian-American woman like herself, who reminded her vividly, so to
speak, of herself. She found herself hesitating during the procedure,
but managed to complete it, although as she cut the vena cava and
watched the patientâs blood drain into canisters, she felt âas if my
own life force were draining away.â
Dr. Chen may intend her account to be simply what the title of her
book promises, a reflection on mortality. But perhaps another thought
for consideration lay there on the operating table, the idea that
despite the inevitability of its end, life is holy â and we do well to
tread carefully and slowly before considering it gone.
That might explain the feeling she writes she had at the end of that
83rd procurement, an exhaustion born not only of âsleep deprivation
[and] overworkâ but of âan unbearable grief.â
© 2006 AM ECHAD RESOURCES
([14]hide)
References
1. http://www.amazon.com/Final-Exam-Surgeons-Reflections-Mortality/dp/0307263533
2. http://www.randomhouse.ca/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780307263537
3. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/magazine/03lives.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
4. http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/313/5792/1402?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&fulltext=vegetative+state&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&resourcetype=HWCIT
5. http://www.neuroguide.com/gregg.html
6. http://wtc2006.org/
7. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/deanesmay/posts/1165593771.html
8. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/1<a%20href=
9. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shlomo_Zalman_Auerbach
10. http://www.medethics.org.il/articles/JME/JMEB2/JMEB2.1.asp
11. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yosef_Shalom_Eliashiv
12. http://www.yutorah.org/bio.cfm?teacherID=80153
13. http://www.yutorah.org/bio.cfm?teacherID=80025
14. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/deanesmay/posts/1165593771.html
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