Singapore’s “organ donor policy … assumes that all citizens are willing donors, unless they have registered with the government that they wish to opt out.”
But when the criterion is “brain death”, and the medics want those organs, they sometimes tend to hurry the family along:
Sim’s family had no objection to his organs being used for transplants but wanted doctors to wait one more day before turning off the life support machine.
But as Sim’s 68-year-old mother and about 20 other relatives knelt weeping before the doctors, begging them to wait, nine police officers entered the ward and restrained the distraught family while Sim’s body was quickly whisked away.
“The hospital staff were running as they wheeled him out of the back door of the room. They were behaving like robbers,” said Sim Chew Hiah, one of Sim’s elder sisters. […]
His parents were offered five years of subsidized hospital fees — and his family received a thank-you letter from the ministry for their “generous organ donation.”
I wish I could be assured that current practice is proper, because I’m not convinced yet that (a) “brain death” is a sound definition of bodily death, or (b) the medical profession can be trusted to make sound ethical decisions. Sad to say, I have opted out in Massachusetts.
The medical profession cannot be trusted. That is a fact.