Abstract
Intensive care to facilitate organ donation (ICOD) is being discussed internationally without reaching a consensus. The aim of this paper is to share with the community the recently published French ICOD guidelines, focusing on two main ethical issues: the ethical acceptability of antemortem interventions during the ICOD process, and the ethical acceptability of considering controlled donation after circulatory death during the ICOD process. These issues raised by the tension between end-of-life care and the possibility of OD deserve to be addressed as they challenge the consideration of ICOD as a routine part of end-of-life care.