TY - JOUR
T1 - Children with intellectual and developmental disabilities as organ transplantation recipients
AU - COMMITTEE ON BIOETHICS
AU - Council on Children With Disabilities
AU - Statter, Mindy B.
AU - Noritz, Garey
AU - Macauley, Robert Conover
AU - Basak, Ratna
AU - Geis, Gina Marie
AU - Laventhal, Naomi Tricot
AU - Opel, Douglas J.
AU - Statter, Mindy B.
AU - Kuo, Dennis Z.
AU - Apkon, Susan
AU - Davidson, Lynn F.
AU - Ellerbeck, Kathryn A.
AU - Foster, Jessica E.A.
AU - Hyman, Susan L.
AU - Noritz, Garey H.
AU - Leppert, Mary O.connor
AU - Saunders, Barbara S.
AU - Stille, Christopher J.
AU - Yin, Larry
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the American Academy of Pediatrics
PY - 2020/5
Y1 - 2020/5
N2 - The demand for transplantable solid organs far exceeds the supply of deceased donor organs. Patient selection criteria are determined by individual transplant programs; given the scarcity of solid organs for transplant, allocation to those most likely to benefit takes into consideration both medical and psychosocial factors. Children with intellectual and developmental disabilities have historically been excluded as potential recipients of organ transplants. When a transplant is likely to provide significant health benefits, denying a transplant to otherwise eligible children with disabilities may constitute illegal and unjustified discrimination. Children with intellectual and developmental disabilities should not be excluded from the potential pool of recipients and should be referred for evaluation as recipients of solid organ transplants.
AB - The demand for transplantable solid organs far exceeds the supply of deceased donor organs. Patient selection criteria are determined by individual transplant programs; given the scarcity of solid organs for transplant, allocation to those most likely to benefit takes into consideration both medical and psychosocial factors. Children with intellectual and developmental disabilities have historically been excluded as potential recipients of organ transplants. When a transplant is likely to provide significant health benefits, denying a transplant to otherwise eligible children with disabilities may constitute illegal and unjustified discrimination. Children with intellectual and developmental disabilities should not be excluded from the potential pool of recipients and should be referred for evaluation as recipients of solid organ transplants.
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U2 - 10.1542/PEDS.2020-0625
DO - 10.1542/PEDS.2020-0625
M3 - Article
C2 - 32312907
AN - SCOPUS:85086884437
SN - 0031-4005
VL - 145
JO - Pediatrics
JF - Pediatrics
IS - 5
M1 - e20200625
ER -