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Adopted by the 22nd World Medical Assembly
Sydney, Australia, August 1968,
and amended by the 35th World Medical Assembly Venice, Italy,
October 1983
- The determination of the time of death is in most countries
the legal responsibility of the physician and should remain
so. Usually the physician will be able without special assistance
to decide that a person is dead, employing the classical criteria
known to all physicians.
- Two modern practices in medicine, however, have made it necessary
to study the question of the time of death further:
- the ability to maintain by artificial means the circulation
of oxygenated blood through tissues of the body which may
have been irreversibly injured and
- the use of cadaver organs such as heart or kidneys for
transplantation.
- A complication is that death is a gradual process at the
cellular level with tissues varying in their ability to withstand
deprivation of oxygen. But clinical interest lies not in the
state of preservation of isolated cells but in the fate of a
person. Here the point of death of the different cells and organs
is not so important as the certainty that the process has become
irreversible by whatever techniques of resuscitation that may
be employed.
- It is essential to determine the irreversible cessation of
all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem.
This determination will be based on clinical judgment supplemented
if necessary by a number of diagnostic aids. However, no single
technological criterion is entirely satisfactory in the present
state of medicine nor can any one technological procedure be
substituted for the overall judgment of the physician. If transplantation
of an organ is involved, the decision that death exists should
be made by two or more physicians and the physicians determining
the moment of death should in no way be immediately concerned
with performance of transplantation.
- Determination of the point of death of the person makes it
ethically permissible to cease attempts at resuscitation and
in countries where the law permits, to remove organs from the
cadaver provided that prevailing legal requirements of consent
have been fulfilled.
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