Graphic for the event with date and time. Date Feb.25 and Time 12-1 p.m. CST

How Can a Patient Be Dead While Their Heart Still Beats? Addressing Ethical Challenges in the Determination of “Brain Death”/Death by Neurological Criteria

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Zoom | Free | Open to the Public
Headshot of Margy McCullough-Hicks, MD.
Margy McCullough-Hicks, MD
Headshot of Ben Miller, MD
Benjamin Miller, MD
Joel Wu, JD, MPH, MA, HEC-C headshot
Joel Wu, JD, MPH, MA, HEC-C

REGISTER

The determination of a person’s death is an important process involving both medical and societal considerations. Controversy and confusion regarding the determination of death by neurologic criteria persist at the bedside, in the community, and within broader policy discussions. This leads to ethical dilemmas, narrative misunderstandings, and a lack of clarity that can result in both medical and moral harms. How can clinicians ensure death by neurologic criteria is determined ethically, accurately, and consistently? How should clinicians respond to patients’ and families’ unfamiliarity with the process of determining death? Specifically, how should clinicians approach the concept of death by neurological criteria when patients and families may not be aware of, or open to the concept? This session will review prevailing legal and medical standards for determining death, and offer practical strategies for how to ethically approach conflict when death by neurological criteria is at issue.

Learning Objectives: After this webinar, attendees will be able to:

  • Describe the social importance of the meaning and determination of death, and the two current legal standards for the determination of death, either: 1) Circulatory or, 2) Brain Death/Death by Neurological Criteria.  
  • Describe the procedures for the determination of death by neurological criteria.
  • Identify strategies to address common ethical issues that arise in the determination of death by neurological criteria. 

Speaker(s)

Margy McCullough-Hicks, MD, is an Assistant Professor of Neurology at the University of Minnesota and Affiliate Faculty at the Institute for Health Informatics. She is a vascular neurologist specializing in cerebrovascular disease and stroke neuroimaging and has a strong interest in clinical and research ethics. Dr. McCullough-Hicks earned her BA in Philosophy from Columbia University and her MD from Georgetown University. She completed a Neurology residency at Yale and a Vascular Neurology fellowship at Stanford. She is a member of the UMN Department of Neurology Diversity Equity and Inclusion Committee, the University of Minnesota Medical Center Ethics Committee, and the American Academy of Neurology Ethics, Law, and Humanities Committee.

Benjamin Miller, MD, is an Associate Professor of Neurology at the University of Minnesota, division head for neurocritical care, and medical director of the Neurocritical Care Unit at the University of Minnesota Medical Center. He is a neurointensivist specializing in the care of critically ill patients who have a significant neurological injury with an interest in the area of neuroprognostication following cardiac arrest. Dr. Miller earned his BS in Psychology, Biochemistry, and Microbiology from the University of Iowa and his MD from The Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine at the University of Iowa. His neurology residency and fellowships in neurocritical care and vascular neurology were completed at Case Western Reserve University at University Hospital Cleveland Medical Center.

Joel Wu, JD, MPH, MA, HEC-C, is a Center for Bioethics Clinical Ethics Assistant Professor and a senior lecturer in the Division of Health Policy and Management at the University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health.  He is a co-chair of the University of Minnesota Medical Center's Ethics Committee, co-lead for the clinical ethics consultation service for MHealth Fairview system hospitals, and member of the MHealth Fairview Ethics Council. Professor Wu earned his BS in Biochemistry, Genetics and Cell Biology, and Microbiology, and his MPH in Epidemiology from the University of Minnesota, and his Masters in Bioethics and JD from Case Western Reserve University. He completed fellowships in Bioethics and Professionalism at the Mayo Clinic and in Clinical Ethics and Children’s Minnesota and Abbott Northwestern Hospital. He is a member of the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network Ethics Committee.