Children as living solid organ donors: Ethical discussion and model hospital policy statement

03/29/25 at 03:15 AM

Children as living solid organ donors: Ethical discussion and model hospital policy statement
The Journal of Clinical Ethics; Gyan C. Moorthy, Aidan P. Crowley, Sandra Amaral; Spring 2025
In recent years, more attention has been paid to living donation as a means to reduce the suffering of individuals with end-stage kidney or liver disease. Implicated ethical issues include medical risk and risk of coercion, counterbalanced by improved medical outcomes and the benefits of saving a life. Living donation becomes particularly ethically complicated with the prospect of child donation, given the child’s developing autonomy and uniquely dependent status. We outline four broad ethical considerations pertinent to living child organ donation: (1) beneficence, (2) respect for the family as a moral unit, (3) respect for the child as a person, and (4) justice. We conclude that it can be ethical for a healthy child to donate a kidney or liver lobe to a close relative who has exhausted other options provided that certain protections are put into place.

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