Article info
Law, ethics and medicine
“Living apart together”: moral frictions between two coexisting organ transplantation schemes
- Dr M T Hilhorst, Department of Medical Ethics and Philosophy (Office AE 342), Faculty of Medicine and Health Care, Erasmus MC, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands; m.hilhorst{at}erasmusmc.nl
Citation
“Living apart together”: moral frictions between two coexisting organ transplantation schemes
Publication history
- Received May 3, 2007
- Revised August 17, 2007
- Accepted September 4, 2007
- First published May 29, 2008.
Online issue publication
April 27, 2016
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
2008 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and the Institute of Medical Ethics
Other content recommended for you
- Live liver donation, ethics and practitioners: ‘I am between the two and if I do not feel comfortable about this situation, I cannot proceed’
- Kidneys on demand
- Join the Lone Kidney Club: incentivising live organ donation
- Self-interest, self-abnegation and self-esteem: towards a new moral economy of non-directed kidney donation
- Renal Transplantation
- Renal transplantation
- Liver transplantation in children: state of the art and future perspectives
- Who should provide the uterus? The ethics of live donor recruitment for uterus transplantation
- How altruistic organ donation may be (intrinsically) bad
- Organ transplantation and the Human Tissue Act