Sustaining a Pregnant Cadaver for the Purpose of Gestating a Fetus: A Limited Defense

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 26 (4):399-430 (2016)
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Abstract

Marlise Muñoz had told her husband, Erik, that if it were ever necessary, she opposed being kept alive through the use of artificial sustenance. Two days before Thanksgiving in 2013, Erik found his wife unconscious on their kitchen floor; she had, by that point, suffered from oxygen deprivation for about an hour. When she arrived at John Peter Smith Hospital, Muñoz was put on a ventilator as hospital workers sought to revive her. They did not succeed. She was declared brain-dead, meaning that she had suffered the irreversible loss of all brain activity. Her family requested that her ventilator be removed, and were shocked to hear their request denied. The Texas advance directive statute prohibits the removal of...

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