Jobs & Education4 mins ago
who owns blood?
20 Answers
Obviously we own our blood, but what about if we donate it or give it up for research ?
I'm asking because I have a bummer of a question on my law degree and need to argue it in 'court'
I'm asking because I have a bummer of a question on my law degree and need to argue it in 'court'
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Tissue samples (including blood) donated for research are treated as gifts or donations, although gifts with conditions attached. This is preferable from a moral and ethical point of view, as it promotes the �gift relationship� and underlines the altruistic motivation of obtaining samples.
If samples taken for research are to be treated as gifts, there must be a recipient, to whom formal responsibility for custodianship of a donated sample of material is transferred. When consent is obtained, the donor (or the person giving consent in the case of material obtained after death) needs to understand that he/she is making a donation of the sample for use in research and hence surrendering ownership.
If samples taken for research are to be treated as gifts, there must be a recipient, to whom formal responsibility for custodianship of a donated sample of material is transferred. When consent is obtained, the donor (or the person giving consent in the case of material obtained after death) needs to understand that he/she is making a donation of the sample for use in research and hence surrendering ownership.
Under the Theft Act, body parts including blood, organs etc (but not sperm) are NOT classified as property.
Things change when there is an alteration process, such as embalming. Hence stealing body parts from a morgue, say, is not an offence under the theft act. Hence, if the morgue is broken in to for this purpose, it can not be a burglary.
An embalmed body, however, is property, belonging to the coroner.
Blood can be property if it has a plasma purification substance, for example, and it will belong to the organistion who has taken it. i.e the NHS, private hospitals etc, dieticians etc.
There is case law on this, but i'll be bu66ered if I can remember. The theives of unaltered blood (some vampire sect I believe) were charged with the theft of the containers or vials only.
Like all theft, the ownership of the "altered" blood can change hands many times. Once it is inside another human, the altered stae reverts back to unaltered. Live and connected body tissue and parts on a live person are not property.
There is also case law on somebody "stealing" hair by cutting it off. There was an assault, but no theft.
Hope this helps.
Things change when there is an alteration process, such as embalming. Hence stealing body parts from a morgue, say, is not an offence under the theft act. Hence, if the morgue is broken in to for this purpose, it can not be a burglary.
An embalmed body, however, is property, belonging to the coroner.
Blood can be property if it has a plasma purification substance, for example, and it will belong to the organistion who has taken it. i.e the NHS, private hospitals etc, dieticians etc.
There is case law on this, but i'll be bu66ered if I can remember. The theives of unaltered blood (some vampire sect I believe) were charged with the theft of the containers or vials only.
Like all theft, the ownership of the "altered" blood can change hands many times. Once it is inside another human, the altered stae reverts back to unaltered. Live and connected body tissue and parts on a live person are not property.
There is also case law on somebody "stealing" hair by cutting it off. There was an assault, but no theft.
Hope this helps.
Just seen your question on Law, now I do not feel as smart!!
If your law degree is as boring as hell (though criminal law is the most interesting) inject some "what if" humour in to the essay.
For example:
If somebody has a pace maker and this is known by kidnappers, and the kidnapping case fails, is there a theft? Or a pigs heart?
Are ashes of the deceased property, and who owns them?
If underwater and drowing, can you steal air from somebody's lungs? (dishonesty being the other one is drowing as well)
Can a Jehover's Witness "steal" or "handle" altered tissue if his purpose is to get a place in heaven. I do not believe the act caters for this.
I could go on, but I may bore you further.
If your law degree is as boring as hell (though criminal law is the most interesting) inject some "what if" humour in to the essay.
For example:
If somebody has a pace maker and this is known by kidnappers, and the kidnapping case fails, is there a theft? Or a pigs heart?
Are ashes of the deceased property, and who owns them?
If underwater and drowing, can you steal air from somebody's lungs? (dishonesty being the other one is drowing as well)
Can a Jehover's Witness "steal" or "handle" altered tissue if his purpose is to get a place in heaven. I do not believe the act caters for this.
I could go on, but I may bore you further.
Well the last time I gave blood was to Holland and Barrett for a food intolerance test, so that pi55es on your fire doesn't it.
And as you seem in fine fettle to abuse my answers lets look at your first one.
1) You do not "own" your own blood. It is not nor ever has been property
2) The tranfusee therefore does not own the blood.
3) If blood was taken without consent or emergency medical needs, it would be assault. No relevance to the question.
How thick can somebody be?? Out of ten, you come a close 8.768.
Now fcuk off.
And as you seem in fine fettle to abuse my answers lets look at your first one.
1) You do not "own" your own blood. It is not nor ever has been property
2) The tranfusee therefore does not own the blood.
3) If blood was taken without consent or emergency medical needs, it would be assault. No relevance to the question.
How thick can somebody be?? Out of ten, you come a close 8.768.
Now fcuk off.