Death, Cadavers and Post-mortem Biomedical Research: A Point of View from a Christian Community |
| |
Authors: | Philippe Charlier Alain Joly Julie Champagnat Luc Brun Geoffroy Lorin de la Grandmaison Christian Hervé |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, University Hospital (AP-HP, UVSQ), 104 R. Poincaré Boulevard, 92380, Garches, France 2. Department of Medical Ethics, Faculty of Medicine Paris 5, 75005, Paris, France 3. Lutheran Church, Paris, France 4. Department of Pathology, University Hospital, Parakou, Benin
|
| |
Abstract: | Facing modern developments of medicine and biomedical researches, religious communities are a strong source of ethics principles and orientations. Human dignity does not disappear after life, in a context of biomedical research on cadavers. Moral, political, social and scientific aspects of research on human cadavers (mainly autopsies) have been widely discussed in biomedical publications, whereas the religious ones (which could be predominant for some) have rarely been analyzed and presented. This article will present the results of a survey carried out a French Benedictine Abbey (relative to death, cadaver’s status and biomedical research) and subsequent Christian background according to canonic texts and practical cases from anthropological, historical, archeological and biomedical origin. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|