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This article is part of a series on End of life decision making, edited by David Crippen.

Review

Bench-to-bedside review: When is dead really dead – on the legitimacy of using neurologic criteria to determine death

Leslie M Whetstine email

Graduate of Duquesne University, Health Care Ethics Center, 600 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15282, USA

author email corresponding author email

Critical Care 2007, 11:208doi:10.1186/cc5690

Published: 13 March 2007

Abstract

This review explores the legitimacy of the whole brain death (WBD) criterion. I argue that it does not fulfill the traditional biologic definition of death and is, therefore, an unsound clinical and philosophical criterion for death. I dispute whether the clinical tests used to diagnose WBD are sufficient to prove all critical brain functions have ceased, as well as examine the sets of brain functions that persist in many WBD patients. I conclude that the definition of death must be modified from a biologic to an ontologic model if we intend to maintain the WBD criterion.


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