Transgressive ethics: Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'

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Standard

Transgressive ethics : Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'. / Hoeyer, Klaus ; Jensen, Anja Marie Bornø.

I: Social Studies of Science, Bind 43/4, Nr. DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341, 2013, s. 598-618.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hoeyer, K & Jensen, AMB 2013, 'Transgressive ethics: Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'', Social Studies of Science, bind 43/4, nr. DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341, s. 598-618. https://doi.org/10.1177/0306312712460341

APA

Hoeyer, K., & Jensen, A. M. B. (2013). Transgressive ethics: Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'. Social Studies of Science, 43/4(DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341), 598-618. https://doi.org/10.1177/0306312712460341

Vancouver

Hoeyer K, Jensen AMB. Transgressive ethics: Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'. Social Studies of Science. 2013;43/4(DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341):598-618. https://doi.org/10.1177/0306312712460341

Author

Hoeyer, Klaus ; Jensen, Anja Marie Bornø. / Transgressive ethics : Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'. I: Social Studies of Science. 2013 ; Bind 43/4, Nr. DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341. s. 598-618.

Bibtex

@article{f4bd51045f694daf8b67f39f023c1cf1,
title = "Transgressive ethics: Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'",
abstract = "Occasionally brain-dead organ donors go into cardiac arrest before reaching the operating theater. In such cases, the needed resuscitation of the potential donor stimulates a range of concerns among the responsible staff. If the intensive care unit staff are going to carry out the organ retrieval, they must rush in with demanding treatment measures such as defibrillation shock and cardiac massage that may break breast bones and make the donor vomit. Such treatment measures conflict with widespread ideals of tranquility in donor care and yet they are currently under consideration in Danish intensive care units. Why is this type of {\textquoteleft}aggressive organ harvesting{\textquoteright}, as it is sometimes called, considered a likely development, even to the extent that the interviewed health professionals request a policy prescribing procurement measures they morally deplore? We suggest that to understand this change of treatment norms, we must move close to everyday work practices and appreciate the importance of material–technical treatment options as well as the interplay of professional ethics and identity. The cardiac treatment of brain-dead donors may thereby illuminate how treatment norms develop on the ground and thus can theoretically develop our understanding of the mechanisms associated with increasingly{\textquoteleft}aggressive organ harvesting{\textquoteright}.",
author = "Klaus Hoeyer and Jensen, {Anja Marie Born{\o}}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1177/0306312712460341",
language = "English",
volume = "43/4",
pages = "598--618",
journal = "Social Studies of Science",
issn = "0306-3127",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Transgressive ethics

T2 - Professional work ethics as a perspective on 'aggressive organ harvesting'

AU - Hoeyer, Klaus

AU - Jensen, Anja Marie Bornø

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Occasionally brain-dead organ donors go into cardiac arrest before reaching the operating theater. In such cases, the needed resuscitation of the potential donor stimulates a range of concerns among the responsible staff. If the intensive care unit staff are going to carry out the organ retrieval, they must rush in with demanding treatment measures such as defibrillation shock and cardiac massage that may break breast bones and make the donor vomit. Such treatment measures conflict with widespread ideals of tranquility in donor care and yet they are currently under consideration in Danish intensive care units. Why is this type of ‘aggressive organ harvesting’, as it is sometimes called, considered a likely development, even to the extent that the interviewed health professionals request a policy prescribing procurement measures they morally deplore? We suggest that to understand this change of treatment norms, we must move close to everyday work practices and appreciate the importance of material–technical treatment options as well as the interplay of professional ethics and identity. The cardiac treatment of brain-dead donors may thereby illuminate how treatment norms develop on the ground and thus can theoretically develop our understanding of the mechanisms associated with increasingly‘aggressive organ harvesting’.

AB - Occasionally brain-dead organ donors go into cardiac arrest before reaching the operating theater. In such cases, the needed resuscitation of the potential donor stimulates a range of concerns among the responsible staff. If the intensive care unit staff are going to carry out the organ retrieval, they must rush in with demanding treatment measures such as defibrillation shock and cardiac massage that may break breast bones and make the donor vomit. Such treatment measures conflict with widespread ideals of tranquility in donor care and yet they are currently under consideration in Danish intensive care units. Why is this type of ‘aggressive organ harvesting’, as it is sometimes called, considered a likely development, even to the extent that the interviewed health professionals request a policy prescribing procurement measures they morally deplore? We suggest that to understand this change of treatment norms, we must move close to everyday work practices and appreciate the importance of material–technical treatment options as well as the interplay of professional ethics and identity. The cardiac treatment of brain-dead donors may thereby illuminate how treatment norms develop on the ground and thus can theoretically develop our understanding of the mechanisms associated with increasingly‘aggressive organ harvesting’.

U2 - 10.1177/0306312712460341

DO - 10.1177/0306312712460341

M3 - Journal article

VL - 43/4

SP - 598

EP - 618

JO - Social Studies of Science

JF - Social Studies of Science

SN - 0306-3127

IS - DOI: 10.1177/0306312712460341

ER -

ID: 122547492