D
didymus
Guest
There’s another%between% about a British girl who refused heart transplant:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=285399
From what I understand the “quality of life” for people with transplanted hearts
I’m sure a heart transplant would be considered extraordinary means according to the Church’s teaching. But could it become ordinary as rejection treatments become perfected or organs become more available, say?
Does the definition of “ordinary” depend on medical practice? Long-term, liver transplants are more or less necessary for stage 5 liver patients given the imperfections of dialysis, but does that make it ordinary?
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=285399
From what I understand the “quality of life” for people with transplanted hearts
I’m sure a heart transplant would be considered extraordinary means according to the Church’s teaching. But could it become ordinary as rejection treatments become perfected or organs become more available, say?
Does the definition of “ordinary” depend on medical practice? Long-term, liver transplants are more or less necessary for stage 5 liver patients given the imperfections of dialysis, but does that make it ordinary?