Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3048878801> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 95 of
95
with 100 items per page.
- W3048878801 endingPage "e583" @default.
- W3048878801 startingPage "e583" @default.
- W3048878801 abstract "We read with interest the article by Padela et al1 on Islamic jurisprudence, organ transplantation, and the recent Fiqh Council of North America ruling.2 Transplantation has long been contentiously discussed in Islamic medical ethics communities. In such dilemmas where the Qu’ran or Hadīth do not clearly describe the proper course of action, principles including ijtihad (independent legal reasoning),3,4istihsan (preferential reasoning of jurists), al-urf (local customary precedent), and al-masalih al-mursalah (public interest or welfare) may offer guidance.5,6Ijtihad-generated rulings (fatawa), however, are case specific and not globally binding.5,7,8 Jurist disagreements (ikhtilaf) are common and key to understanding the Islamic legal tradition.9 This means that a jurist’s ruling on 1 case (eg, transplantation) is not by default invalidated or reversed by an opposite finding by a different jurist on a different case of the same topic.10,11 This may in part be because the merits, context, and participants in each case differ. A Muslim scholarly saying states: our opinion is a right one with the possibility of being wrong, and others’ opinions are wrong ones with the possibility of being right.10 Failure to understand this concept may generate uncertainty, confusion, and aid conflict. Important theological elements for understanding Islamic views toward transplantation include the sacredness of life (Qur’an 5:32), respect for the human body and its use (Qur’an 17:36,70) and Hadīth of the Prophet Muhammad (‘alayhi as-salām).i12,13 Accordingly, some may believe that organ transplantation/donation is prohibited; however, several Islamic jurisprudential principles have allowed others to determine its permissibility including (1) necessity-breaks-the-law (darūra); (2) working for the public interest or wellbeing of society (al-masalih al-mursalah); and (3) altruism (al-ithar). Darūra may allow for exceptions to general rules, while al-masalih al-mursalah and al-ithar may allow arguments that overrule the individual in favor of greater society.14 Disagreements exist regarding transplantation fatawa. Of 42 identified fatawa (Table 1), 23 were Sunni (13 permissible, 7 conditional, 3 prohibited), 16 were Shi’a (4 permissible, 11 conditional, 1 prohibited), and 3 were joint Sunni/Shi’a (1 permissible, 2 conditional). Thirty-six (86%) of fatawa permit organ donation conditionally or unconditionally. Autologous transplantation is widely accepted if performed for medical indication (ie, not cosmetic), success is likely, and it carries no mortality risk.14 Proposed restrictions to allogeneic transplantation including (1) donor has full mental capacity; (2) donor consent (may be granted postmortem by closest relatives)15; (3) adult (preferable >21 y);15,16 (4) medically determined to be lifesaving or able maintain the recipient’s quality-of-life without suitable alternative; (5) recipient benefit exceeds donor harm and some stipulate; and (6) live donation only of nonvital (ie, self-renewing) or nonsingular organs (eg, hematopoietic cells, skin, kidney, lung, liver).14 Gonad transplantation is forbidden; however, other internal sex organs (eg, uterus) may be permissible.14TABLE 1.: Summary of Islamic fatawa regarding the permissibility of transplantationGiven the quantity, language, and timeline of rulings, topic knowledge of individual religious leaders may vary. Public awareness of transplant fatawa is suboptimal.9,55–61Fatawa have limitations and are case specific; context is important. A dissenting ruling arising within 1 context, time, or location is not necessarily binding on those in another, and vise-a-versa. Accordingly, transplant permissibility may justifiably vary by circumstance, time, location, and context." @default.
- W3048878801 created "2020-08-18" @default.
- W3048878801 creator A5003713016 @default.
- W3048878801 creator A5017274015 @default.
- W3048878801 creator A5033580114 @default.
- W3048878801 date "2020-07-17" @default.
- W3048878801 modified "2023-10-02" @default.
- W3048878801 title "Clarification on Islamic Jurisprudence and Transplantation" @default.
- W3048878801 cites W1967214719 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W1986154679 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2034002829 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2035169100 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2040781416 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2073372656 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2076180525 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2088183733 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2110677162 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2177859713 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W2314740588 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W3006709234 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W3014762701 @default.
- W3048878801 cites W4239934902 @default.
- W3048878801 doi "https://doi.org/10.1097/txd.0000000000001022" @default.
- W3048878801 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/7371101" @default.
- W3048878801 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32766431" @default.
- W3048878801 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3048878801 type Work @default.
- W3048878801 sameAs 3048878801 @default.
- W3048878801 citedByCount "2" @default.
- W3048878801 countsByYear W30488788012021 @default.
- W3048878801 countsByYear W30488788012023 @default.
- W3048878801 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3048878801 hasAuthorship W3048878801A5003713016 @default.
- W3048878801 hasAuthorship W3048878801A5017274015 @default.
- W3048878801 hasAuthorship W3048878801A5033580114 @default.
- W3048878801 hasBestOaLocation W30488788011 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C11171543 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C141071460 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C168702047 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C27206212 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C2781140086 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C2911091166 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C4445939 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C71043370 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C85940911 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C11171543 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C138885662 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C141071460 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C15744967 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C166957645 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C168702047 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C17744445 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C199539241 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C27206212 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C2779343474 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C2781140086 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C2911091166 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C4445939 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C71043370 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C71924100 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C85940911 @default.
- W3048878801 hasConceptScore W3048878801C95457728 @default.
- W3048878801 hasIssue "8" @default.
- W3048878801 hasLocation W30488788011 @default.
- W3048878801 hasLocation W30488788012 @default.
- W3048878801 hasLocation W30488788013 @default.
- W3048878801 hasLocation W30488788014 @default.
- W3048878801 hasLocation W30488788015 @default.
- W3048878801 hasOpenAccess W3048878801 @default.
- W3048878801 hasPrimaryLocation W30488788011 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W2179438938 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W2247500164 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W2325762236 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W2505904761 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W3111272399 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W3161850441 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W3167872357 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W4206267386 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W4224228461 @default.
- W3048878801 hasRelatedWork W4292408685 @default.
- W3048878801 hasVolume "6" @default.
- W3048878801 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3048878801 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3048878801 magId "3048878801" @default.
- W3048878801 workType "article" @default.