Writer and artist James Bridle uncovers a dark, strange corner of the internet, where unknown people or groups on YouTube hack the brains of young children i...
Cash incentives and the payment of funeral expenses are two ideas being put forward to encourage people to donate human organs and tissue. The Nuffield Council on Bioethics is asking the public if it is ethical to use financial incentives to increase donations of organs, eggs and sperm. Paying for most types of organs and tissue is illegal in the UK. The public consultation will last 12 weeks and the council's findings will be published in autumn 2011.
We provide our bodies or parts of our bodies for medical research or for the treatment of others in a number of ways and for a variety of reasons. However, there is a shortage of bodily material for many of these purposes in the UK. What should be done about it? The Council has set up a Working Party, chaired by Professor Dame Marilyn Strathern, to explore the ethical issues raised by the provision of bodily material for medical treatment and research. Questions to be considered include: * what motivates people to provide bodily material and what inducements or incentives are appropriate? * what constitutes valid consent? * what future ownership or control people should have over donated materials? * are there ethical limits on how we try to meet demand?
This report documents changes since the ODT 2008 report. It records significant improvements that have been made to infrastructure and projected 34% increase in donation rates over 4 yrs to April 2012. The report notes, however, that even if Taskforce’s target of a 50% increase in donation rates by 2013 is achieved, people will still be dying unnecessarily while waiting for an organ. We believe that we now need to decide whether we should be satisfied that we have done all we can or whether we should seek to build on what has already been achieved by shifting our attention to additional ways of increasing number of organ donors. The report examines a range of options that have been suggested for increasing the number of donors including a system of mandated choice, reciprocity, a regulated market or paying the funeral expenses of those who sign up to the ODR and subsequently donate organs. The report also explains why we remain convinced that an opt-out system with safeguards is best.
Proposals for increasing organ donation are often rejected as incompatible with altruistic motivation on the part of donors. This paper questions, on conceptual grounds, whether most organ donors really are altruistic. If we distinguish between altruism and solidarity – a more restricted form of other-concern, limited to members of a particular group – then most organ donors exhibit solidarity, rather than altruism. If organ donation really must be altruistic, then we have reasons to worry about the motives of existing donors. However, I argue that altruism is not necessary, because organ donation supplies important goods, whatever the motivation, and we can reject certain dubious motivations, such as financial profit, without insisting on altruism. Once solidaristic donation is accepted, certain reforms for increasing donation rates seem permissible. This paper considers two proposals. Firstly, it has been suggested that registered donors should receive priority for transplants. Whil
In an effort to increase living organ donation, 15 states passed tax deductions and 1 a tax credit to help defray potential medical, lodging and wage loss costs between 2004 and 2008. To assess the impact of these policies on living donation rates, we used a differences-in-differences strategy which compares the pre- and post-legislation change in living donations in states that passed legislation against the same change in those states that did not. We found no statistically significant effect of these tax policies on donation rates. Furthermore, we found no evidence of any lagged effects, differential impacts by gender, race or donor relationship, or impacts on deceased donation. Possible hypotheses to explain our findings are: the cash value of the tax deduction may be too low to defray costs faced by donors, lack of public awareness about the existence of these policies, and that states that were proactive enough to pass tax policy laws may have already depleted donor pools with pr
„der belgische König hat in der Ära des europäischen Imperialismus für seinen persönlichen Profit 5 Millionen Menschen im Kongo durch Arbeit vernichten und vielen zigtausenden die Hände abschlagen lassen, wenn sie nicht parierten. Ich hab bislang erst einen Dokumentarfilm im ARTE-Nachtprogramm gesehen, der diese Kolonialverbrechen überhaupt einmal ins Bewusstsein der Leute zu rücken versuchte.“ (lysis) --------------- Damit die Soldaten mit ihrer Munition nicht auf die Jagd gingen oder sie etwa für einen Aufstand zurückbehielten, musste genau Rechenschaft für jede abgeschossene Patrone gegeben werden. Dies wurde durch die Formel „für jede Kugel eine rechte Hand“ gelöst: Für jede Kugel, die abgeschossen wurde, mussten sie den von ihnen Getöteten die rechte Hand abhacken und als Beweis vorlegen. Oftmals wurden Lebenden die Hände abgehackt, um verschossene Munition zu erklären. Bei vielen Händen, wurde man frühzeitig aus dem harten Armeedienst entlassen, was das Abhacken begünstigte.
M. Becker, K. Borchert, M. Hirth, H. Mewes, A. Hotho, und P. Tran-Gia. Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Knowledge Technologies and Data-driven Business, Seite 10:1--10:8. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (Oktober 2015)
F. Teschner, A. Mazarakis, R. Riordan, und C. Weinhardt. roceedings of the International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS). (Shanghai, China), Seite 1-14. Association for Information Systems, (2011)