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Beecher Dépassé: Fifty Years of Determining Death, Legally.

Abstract
Five decades ago, Henry Knowles Beecher, a renowned professor of research anesthesiology, sought to solve a problem created by modern medicine. The solution proposed by Beecher and his colleagues on the Ad Hoc Committee of the Harvard Medical School to Examine the Definition of Brain Death proved very influential.1 Indeed, other contemporaneous medical developments magnified its significance yet also made the solution it offered somewhat problematic. As we mark this fiftieth anniversary, at a time when concerns about the conceptual model on which its recommendations rested are being voiced by critics from medicine as well as philosophy, it is worthwhile to view the committee's report in relation to the problem that prompted its existence as well as the one to which it was quickly applied.
AuthorsAlexander M Capron
JournalThe Hastings Center report (Hastings Cent Rep) Vol. 48 Suppl 4 Pg. S14-S18 (11 2018) ISSN: 1552-146X [Electronic] United States
PMID30584846 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Copyright© 2018 The Hastings Center.
Topics
  • Attitude of Health Personnel
  • Attitude to Death
  • Bioethical Issues
  • Brain Death (diagnosis)
  • Coma (psychology)
  • Critical Pathways (ethics, legislation & jurisprudence)
  • Death
  • Humans
  • Neurology (trends)
  • Tissue and Organ Harvesting (ethics, psychology)

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