Medicalising Normal Human Experience: The Example of Hormone Replacement Therapy

Sharron Cole
Issue 8, November 2002

The human condition is a mass of contrasting states – wellness and sickness, youth and old age, vigour and increasing frailty, obesity and thinness, baldness and hairiness – the list could go on interminably. Many of the processes cannot be controlled – they are simply a part of what it means to be human. Others, for example excessive weight gain or high blood pressure, can be helped by lifestyle changes such as improved nutrition and increased exercise.

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Editorial: Organ donation - An Enduring Gift

Michael McCabe
Issue 12, April 2004

Christopher had been crossing the road on a drizzly wet Wellington day when he was hit by two cars. He
suffered multiple injuries and was placed on life support in Intensive Care.

While it was well known that 16-year old Christopher had no love affair with schooling it soon became clear that he was much loved by his family and friends, judging by the numbers in the waiting room at Intensive Care. After a week on life-support and after a diagnosis of brain-death the decision was made to withdraw ventilation and allow him to die. The night before this happened the attending-physician asked Christopher's mother and sister if they would allow his kidneys and corneas to be donated for transplant. The family agreed and the following day Christopher's two kidneys and two corneas were transplanted into four patients at Wellington Hospital.

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My Experience of Renal Failure and its Treatment

Brian Quin, SM
Issue 12, April 2004

Tuesday, 9 June 1992 was a very important date in my life story. On that day, at Wellington Hospital, my brother Alan gave me one of his kidneys.

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Letter from a Kidney Donor

Alan Quin
Issue 12, April 2004 

Dear Reader,

The opportunity to share vital life enhancing body parts by way of a mutual organ transplant operation is a privilege relatively few New Zealanders will ever experience. Although the benefits are heightened for the live donor, the possibility of organ donation is also uplifting for the prospective giver. These benefits are psycho/spiritual: the act of giving instils a state of 'structural' equanimity and joy within the donor and tends to inwardly affirm life's essential paradox that our deeper potential is sacrificial.

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Stem Cell Research in New Zealand

John Kleinsman
Issue 12, April 2004

A great deal of promise and excitement surrounds the new possibilities for health care heralded by increasing knowledge into the development of human cells. In New Zealand, Parliament is presently considering legislation on human assisted reproductive technology (HART Bill) that will impact directly on the sort of research able to be undertaken in this country.

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Making a Life-Saving Difference: Organ Donation and Consent

John Kleinsman
Issue 13, August 2004

As reported in the last issue of The Nathaniel Report (number 12, April 2004) New Zealand has one of the lowest organ donation rates in the world. Since then the Ministry of Health has initiated a review of the regulation of human tissue and tissue-based therapies, including the practices surrounding organ transplantation. Two key questions have emerged in the debate around organ donation: What sort of consent is required? Should an individual's wishes always be followed?

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Developments in Embryo Research

Anne Dickinson

In the last few years while New Zealanders have been debating cloning and assisted human reproduction and the government has been legislating to deal with these issues, human embryo research has moved in new directions in other countries.

Such research takes many forms. For example, in the USA scientists have created human embryos which were part male and part female, by implanting cells from male embryos into female embryos. The hybrid embryos developed normally in some cases, with intermixed male and female cells, and abnormally in others. The embryos were destroyed after six days of development.

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Editorial: HIV-AIDS in Oceania

Michael McCabe
Issue 18, April 2006

Jesus recognition and inclusion, to the point of table-fellowship, of the poor and excluded provides the model for Christian ministry to people with AIDS-HIV the compassionate reception of deprived human others is at the heart of Jesus' ministry.

--Enda McDonagh

One of the blessings of my ministry as Director of The Nathaniel Centre has been the invitation to work in partnership with Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand and Caritas Australia to help to address the challenge of HIV-AIDS in Oceania. While I had some awareness of the enormity of the problem of AIDS [Acquired Immunodaficiency Syndrome] among particelar communities, and in places such as Sub-Saharan Africa, I was quite ignorant of the extent of HIV-AIDS in Oceania. Consequently, in 2000, when Bishop Peter Cullinane passed on to me a request from the Bishops' Conference of Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands for assistance in dealing with the theological and pastoral issues associated with HIV-AIDS, I embarked on a learning experience which was to have a profound effect on me personally.

The then Director of Caritas in New Zealand, Anne Dickinson, who had been to Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands a number of times as part of her work, encouraged me to respond to this request and offered Caritas support for the project. With Anne's help a seminar was developed, making use of the material provided by English Caritas agency, CAFOD, a leader in HIV-AIDS work in the developing world, together with research carried out by the staff of The Nathaniel Centre on the theological issues and on the pastoral issues in Oceania.

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