Sandeep Jauhar, cardiologist and New York Times opinion writer, argues that in order to increase donor organs, “we should expand the definition of death.”
Death is not simply a biological fact, but it’s also a complex social choice. We should expand the definition of death. It will actually save lives.
Read the op-ed I wrote with two of my @NorthwellHealth colleagues in @nytopinion today.https://t.co/Zb9EYnuat8
— Sandeep Jauhar (@sjauhar) August 1, 2025
Jauhar added, “Death is not simply a biological fact, but it’s also a social choice.”
They want to harvest your organs while you’re still alive. https://t.co/O8t5KwOMeR
— Cernovich (@Cernovich) August 1, 2025
He co-authored the op‑ed with Snehal Patel and Deane Smith in the New York Times, calling for legal change to boost transplant availability.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/30/opinion/organ-donors-death-definition.html
This proposal would redefine brain death to include irreversibly comatose patients on life support, allowing earlier organ retrieval. The authors argue current rules limit donor pools and cost lives.
Not widely reported: the op‑ed acknowledges risks from premature procurement and calls for stronger consent standards. That adds nuance to what may look like a radical policy push.
This debate goes beyond medicine. It challenges cultural and ethical norms about what counts as death.