autumnal
Enlightened
- Feb 4, 2020
- 1,950
Having seen a few posts asking about this in regards to specific methods, I thought I would provide a general overview on the topic as I understand it.
Suicide and organ donation - a noble goal but unlikely scenario
A lot of people ask whether they can donate their organs after suicide. This is a noble goal, whether they be people who have always wanted to be organ donors (for any cause of death), or whether they have specifically started considering organ donation since becoming suicidal as a way to create something positive out of what can be a negative event.
The short answer is that there are not many suicide methods in which the body is still suitable for organ donation. There are two reasons for this, the medical and the legal.
Medically, the organs degrade and ultimately die after a certain period of time without oxygen. This period of time is very short. Due to this limited timeframe, the ideal conditions for organ donation involve you being in a hospital, already declared brain-dead but still being kept physically alive by machines. The living organs can then be harvested while you are still physically alive and so they are in the best condition and without oxygen for the shortest period of time between removal and transplant. The recipient of the organs will also be organised and schedules prepared down to the second so that they receive your organs as soon as possible.
Suicide, as a method (at least when successful) requires you to not be found and rescued for a certain period of time between the attempt and the moment of death. We typically achieve that by leaving a long enough delay between our planned time of death and the earliest possible time at which we could be discovered. That time buffer means our organs will almost never be able to be harvested due to their degradation and death.
Note that the delay inherent to suicide means that it is largely irrelevant whether certain specific methods affect our organs in a certain way or make them particularly 'unsuitable' for transplantation. Regardless of the condition they are in at the moment of death, it is the delays afterwards which always rule out transplantation rather than the particular method used.
Legally, most countries regard a suicide as an unexpected death and one that needs investigation. This could be to rule out the possibility of murder or other suspicious circumstances, or for more general reasons to establish the way in which death occurred and whether any coroners findings could help to identify and remove possible causes or hazards which may put others at similar risk in the future. Due to this requirement, once death is determined by first responders, the body will often need to be photographed at the scene, have forensic samples taken from it at the scene, be transported to a morgue and undergo examination, identification by forensic means or relatives, photography, toxicology and possibly even full autopsy. The long timeframe for these tasks occurring means the organs are always without oxygen for an extended period of time and are never suitable for harvesting. Note that the legal limitation is a purely practical one, it does not mean that there is a law against organ transplantation from suicides.
Suicidal people who would like to contribute something similarly positive as organ donation may instead consider:
Disclaimer: some knowledge in both these areas but not a doctor or a lawyer.
Suicide and organ donation - a noble goal but unlikely scenario
A lot of people ask whether they can donate their organs after suicide. This is a noble goal, whether they be people who have always wanted to be organ donors (for any cause of death), or whether they have specifically started considering organ donation since becoming suicidal as a way to create something positive out of what can be a negative event.
The short answer is that there are not many suicide methods in which the body is still suitable for organ donation. There are two reasons for this, the medical and the legal.
Medically, the organs degrade and ultimately die after a certain period of time without oxygen. This period of time is very short. Due to this limited timeframe, the ideal conditions for organ donation involve you being in a hospital, already declared brain-dead but still being kept physically alive by machines. The living organs can then be harvested while you are still physically alive and so they are in the best condition and without oxygen for the shortest period of time between removal and transplant. The recipient of the organs will also be organised and schedules prepared down to the second so that they receive your organs as soon as possible.
Suicide, as a method (at least when successful) requires you to not be found and rescued for a certain period of time between the attempt and the moment of death. We typically achieve that by leaving a long enough delay between our planned time of death and the earliest possible time at which we could be discovered. That time buffer means our organs will almost never be able to be harvested due to their degradation and death.
Note that the delay inherent to suicide means that it is largely irrelevant whether certain specific methods affect our organs in a certain way or make them particularly 'unsuitable' for transplantation. Regardless of the condition they are in at the moment of death, it is the delays afterwards which always rule out transplantation rather than the particular method used.
Legally, most countries regard a suicide as an unexpected death and one that needs investigation. This could be to rule out the possibility of murder or other suspicious circumstances, or for more general reasons to establish the way in which death occurred and whether any coroners findings could help to identify and remove possible causes or hazards which may put others at similar risk in the future. Due to this requirement, once death is determined by first responders, the body will often need to be photographed at the scene, have forensic samples taken from it at the scene, be transported to a morgue and undergo examination, identification by forensic means or relatives, photography, toxicology and possibly even full autopsy. The long timeframe for these tasks occurring means the organs are always without oxygen for an extended period of time and are never suitable for harvesting. Note that the legal limitation is a purely practical one, it does not mean that there is a law against organ transplantation from suicides.
Suicidal people who would like to contribute something similarly positive as organ donation may instead consider:
- A living donation of an organ, although this is a long and complex process to undergo and there is no guarantee you will be found suitable.
- Leaving your body to science for research or teaching purposes, although this also has restrictions on delays between death and discovery due to the degradation of your body, although these are not quite as rigourous as for organ donation. There may also be limiting effects of the practical legal restrictions mentioned earlier. Additionally, some countries actually have more supply than demand for bodies and your body may not be accepted.
- Leaving your body to a body farm. These facilities study the effect on human remains of controlled environmental conditions. This knowledge then helps forensic science to learn what may have happened to other bodies. These facilities are rare outside of the US.
- Leaving money to charity, whether any kind of charity or one specific to supporting organ donation.
Disclaimer: some knowledge in both these areas but not a doctor or a lawyer.