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Health care reform in Minnesota [Letter]

Li, J T; Miles, S H; Lurie, N; Quam, L; Caplan, A; Murphy, J Peter Jr.
PMID: 8446157
ISSN: 0028-4793
CID: 349812

How should science deal with data from unethical research?

Caplan, Arthur
ORIGINAL:0008205
ISSN: 1043-609x
CID: 347912

A transplant of real life

Caplan, Arthur, Diaz, V; Mauer, S.M.
ORIGINAL:0008207
ISSN: 0931-041x
CID: 347932

24th Bethesda conference: Cardiac transplantation. Task Force 3: Recipient guidelines/prioritization [Guideline]

Mudge, G H; Goldstein, S; Addonizio, L J; Caplan, A; Mancini, D; Levine, T B; Ritsch, M E Jr; Stevenson, L W
PMID: 8509544
ISSN: 0735-1097
CID: 347962

Clinton's health care reforms [Editorial]

Caplan, A
PMCID:1678868
PMID: 8401117
ISSN: 0959-8138
CID: 348042

Can we ever solve the shortage problem?

Caplan, Arthur
ORIGINAL:0008210
ISSN: 0905-9199
CID: 348062

Beastly conduct: ethical issues in animal experimentation

Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur
in: The Ethical dimensions of the biological sciences by Bulger, Ruth Ellen; Heitman, Elizabeth; Reiser, Stanley Joel [Eds]
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1993
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 9780521435994
CID: 336822

In health care reform, think of patient comfort, too

Caplan, A
PMID: 7690877
ISSN: 0026-556x
CID: 336382

Must I be my brother's keeper? Ethical issues in the use of living donors as sources of liver and other solid organs

Caplan, A
PMID: 8470256
ISSN: 0041-1345
CID: 336392

Rationing failure. The ethical lessons of the retransplantation of scarce vital organs

Ubel, P A; Arnold, R M; Caplan, A L
Because of a shortage of transplantable livers and hearts, the transplant community has had to decide--by who gets an organ--who lives or dies. Despite this shortage, whether one has previously received a transplant is not used as a criterion to distribute organs. The existing allocation system distributes 10% to 20% of available hearts and livers to retransplant patients. This article examines three differences between primary transplantation and retransplantation that may affect the priority that retransplant candidates should receive in vying for organs: (1) the special obligations that transplant teams have not to abandon patients on whom they have already performed a transplant, (2) the fairness of allowing individuals to get multiple transplants while some die awaiting their first, and (3) the difference in efficacy between primary transplantation and retransplantation. Only this last difference holds up to critical analysis. Our moral duty to direct scarce, lifesaving resources to those likely to benefit from them, suggests that, all other things equal, primary transplant candidates should receive priority because their mortality after transplantation is lower. Consistency also demands that previous transplant history be taken into account, as we already allocate organs according to ABO blood group matching, a factor that affects transplant outcome approximately the same amount as a previous transplantation. We therefore conclude that the system should be revised so that primary transplant candidates have a better chance of receiving organs than retransplant candidates.
PMID: 8230624
ISSN: 0098-7484
CID: 165251