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Ethics Assessment

Autor:   •  April 29, 2016  •  Creative Writing  •  1,628 Words (7 Pages)  •  815 Views

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Ethics Assessment

The ethical dilemma the CEO may face is the urgency of obtaining an organ donor for a loved one. There are procedures and policies within the hospitals that need to be implemented and addressed with each patient. The hospitals are in connection with the stakeholder’s best interest to effectively cooperate and create a commodity plan. Many cases are pushed to the front of the line with the sad reality of wealth that use bribery in order to wiggle their way to the top. The truth is, the person in that ranking (CEO) is able to over-ride certain requests. Abiding within the laws, there may be other avenues of helping one family over another. The difference is, would they take the ethical approach? In the movie Inhale, Paul Stanton who was looking to get a donor from Mexico for his diagnosed daughter was under the impression these donors just showed up. Once he witnessed a specific boy was to be murdered in order to save his daughter; the father was at a crossroads uncertain whether he would want for this young child to die in order to save his daughters life. Ultimately he understood and could not continue ethically. Ethically the person that may call order should have the law and ethics involved in the day to day operations.

While the staff at the hospital will help with facilitating urgent requests of donor trading; I would not treat it as a commodity. It should be established as a fair duty. For instance, if there is a fatal accident and there is a family of 3 killed. All were established donor participants. The major organs that we would help with transferring should be in compliance with the government, Foreign Affairs and society. Similar to the ethical values, I had a friend that worked in a leasing office in a newly developed apartment complex. The city offered a below market rate for the units, about 10% of the community. There were strict requirements for being put on the wait list for these homes. One potential tenant went too far extremes to bribing the leasing manager. Knowing that there are many families in need of an affordable home, this manager did not take ethical measures and allowed the bribery. This was truly disheartening. To know that many families are at poverty level and need help with their housing situation; this is ethically wrong.

Who should be involved in the decision making process should ultimately be the donor and their family. Many donors have already declared to either the state or their families that they would like to donate their organs once they die. Then there is a small percentage of individuals that are not able to confirm their stance and they have died suddenly. Many of the people who choose not to donate, have a religious responsibility. Many religions do not allow such a manner to be acceptable. During the consultation, when the recipient is called for the organ transplant; it should

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