Do not resuscitate, brain death, and organ transplantation:Islamic perspective

Dublin Core

Title

Do not resuscitate, brain death, and organ transplantation:Islamic perspective

Author

Chamsi-Pasha, Hassan
Albar, Mohammed Ali

Publisher

2017/00/00

Language

English

Publication Date

20170000

Abstract

Muslim patients and families are often reluctant to discuss and accept fatal diagnoses and prognoses. In many instances, aggressive therapy is requested by a patient's family, prolonging the life of the patient at all costs. Islamic law permits the withdrawal of futile treatment, including life support, from terminally ill patients allowing death to take its natural course. 'Do not resuscitate' is permitted in Islamic law in certain situations. Debate continues about the certainty of brain death criteria within Islamic scholars. Although brain death is accepted as true death by the majority of Muslim scholars and medical organizations, the consensus in the Muslim world is not unanimous, and some scholars still accept death only by cardiopulmonary criteria. Organ transplantation has been accepted in Islamic countries (with some resistance from some jurists). Many fatwas (decrees) of Islamic Jurisprudence Councils have been issued and allowed organs to be donated from living competent adult donor

Abstract Translated

and from deceased (cadavers), provided that they have agreed to donate or their families have agreed to donate after their death (usually these are brain-dead cases). A clear and well-defined policy from the ministry of health regarding do not resuscitate, brain death, and other end-of-life issues is urgently needed for all hospitals and health providers in most (if not all) Muslim and Arab countries.

Primary Classification

20.5.1

Secondary Classification

20.5.1;20.2.1;19.1;1.2

Primary keywords

brain death--[pri];Islamic ethics--[pri];organ transplantation--[pri];resuscitation orders--[pri]

Secondary keywords

cardiac death;determination of death;futility;Islamic councils;organ donation

Journal Article

Avicenna Journal of Medicine2017; 7(2):35-45

Note

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported

Call Number

citation

Bibliography

59 refs

ISSN

22310770 (print);22494464 (online)

Collection

Citation

“Do not resuscitate, brain death, and organ transplantation:Islamic perspective,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 18, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/37653.