Hi, ladies!
How are you?
Today I will write a topic about organ transplant law:
The Upper House passed into law revisions of organ transplant law, making it possible transplant organs from brain-dead patients, who have not made their intensions clear as long as their family members give their consent.
The revisions will also allow children to be donors. This must be a long-waited legal change for many children whose only chance for survival is to go overseas.
However, the practice of organ transplants raises various questions concerning individual views about death.
First, it defines brain death as legal human death, but it is hard to deny that the public still have many doubts about it. Without public understanding, there can be no progress in the efforts to promote organ transplants.
Second, there are also concerns related to the intentions of potential donors. Many efforts are needed to increase opportunities for people to express their intentions.
Finally, some touchy issues remain unsolved in organ transplants from children. It is crucial to use different criteria for adults, and determine whether they are victims of physical abuse or not.
Such low-profile efforts are essential for securing wide public acceptance of organ transplantation in Japan.
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1 comment:
Hello, Cherry and friends!
How are you?
Very strange weather.
I wonder when the rain front will be gone.
My thesis is almost done. Only I proofread it once in a while until I submit it.
Cherry, your idea is interesting but the touchy issues you mentioned in the end are ambiguous. Especially, you used the word, abuse, which puzzled me. Could you explain?
How are you doing with the intermediate article quiz? So far, I have done it four times except the first one. Considering the results, it will take me two or three times more.
See you tomorrow.
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