What is your answer?

Which position do the authors NOT hold about organ donation?

    { 1 } - The right of the next of kin in regard to caring for the human body may be superseded by statements made by the person while still alive, or by the needs of society.
    { 2 } - Persons or institutions to whom organ donation is made are required by law to accept the gift or properly dispose of the body.
    { 3 } - Usually the next of kin or the person to whom the corpse is committed for care has the legal right to determine if organs may be removed from the body and if an autopsy may be performed.
    { 4 } - In practice, if the next of kin refuses the request for organ retrieval, even if the deceased person had signed an anatomical gift donation card, hospitals and physicians will usually follow the decision of the next of kin because they fear malpractice charges, even though they are protected from civil and criminal proceedings in such a case by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act which is law in all 50 states.
    { 5 } - In accord with the respect due to the remains of a human person, no organs should be removed from a corpse, nor should the body be dismembered in any way, unless a sufficient reason justifies such an action.

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1 is wrong. Please try again.

Which position do the authors NOT hold about organ donation?

    { 1 } - The right of the next of kin in regard to caring for the human body may be superseded by statements made by the person while still alive, or by the needs of society.
    { 2 } - Persons or institutions to whom organ donation is made are required by law to accept the gift or properly dispose of the body.
    { 3 } - Usually the next of kin or the person to whom the corpse is committed for care has the legal right to determine if organs may be removed from the body and if an autopsy may be performed.
    { 4 } - In practice, if the next of kin refuses the request for organ retrieval, even if the deceased person had signed an anatomical gift donation card, hospitals and physicians will usually follow the decision of the next of kin because they fear malpractice charges, even though they are protected from civil and criminal proceedings in such a case by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act which is law in all 50 states.
    { 5 } - In accord with the respect due to the remains of a human person, no organs should be removed from a corpse, nor should the body be dismembered in any way, unless a sufficient reason justifies such an action.

See p. 410.

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2 is correct!

Which position do the authors NOT hold about organ donation?

    { 1 } - The right of the next of kin in regard to caring for the human body may be superseded by statements made by the person while still alive, or by the needs of society.
    { 2 } - Persons or institutions to whom organ donation is made are required by law to accept the gift or properly dispose of the body.
    { 3 } - Usually the next of kin or the person to whom the corpse is committed for care has the legal right to determine if organs may be removed from the body and if an autopsy may be performed.
    { 4 } - In practice, if the next of kin refuses the request for organ retrieval, even if the deceased person had signed an anatomical gift donation card, hospitals and physicians will usually follow the decision of the next of kin because they fear malpractice charges, even though they are protected from civil and criminal proceedings in such a case by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act which is law in all 50 states.
    { 5 } - In accord with the respect due to the remains of a human person, no organs should be removed from a corpse, nor should the body be dismembered in any way, unless a sufficient reason justifies such an action.

See p. 410.

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3 is wrong. Please try again.

Which position do the authors NOT hold about organ donation?

    { 1 } - The right of the next of kin in regard to caring for the human body may be superseded by statements made by the person while still alive, or by the needs of society.
    { 2 } - Persons or institutions to whom organ donation is made are required by law to accept the gift or properly dispose of the body.
    { 3 } - Usually the next of kin or the person to whom the corpse is committed for care has the legal right to determine if organs may be removed from the body and if an autopsy may be performed.
    { 4 } - In practice, if the next of kin refuses the request for organ retrieval, even if the deceased person had signed an anatomical gift donation card, hospitals and physicians will usually follow the decision of the next of kin because they fear malpractice charges, even though they are protected from civil and criminal proceedings in such a case by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act which is law in all 50 states.
    { 5 } - In accord with the respect due to the remains of a human person, no organs should be removed from a corpse, nor should the body be dismembered in any way, unless a sufficient reason justifies such an action.

See p. 410.

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4 is wrong. Please try again.

Which position do the authors NOT hold about organ donation?

    { 1 } - The right of the next of kin in regard to caring for the human body may be superseded by statements made by the person while still alive, or by the needs of society.
    { 2 } - Persons or institutions to whom organ donation is made are required by law to accept the gift or properly dispose of the body.
    { 3 } - Usually the next of kin or the person to whom the corpse is committed for care has the legal right to determine if organs may be removed from the body and if an autopsy may be performed.
    { 4 } - In practice, if the next of kin refuses the request for organ retrieval, even if the deceased person had signed an anatomical gift donation card, hospitals and physicians will usually follow the decision of the next of kin because they fear malpractice charges, even though they are protected from civil and criminal proceedings in such a case by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act which is law in all 50 states.
    { 5 } - In accord with the respect due to the remains of a human person, no organs should be removed from a corpse, nor should the body be dismembered in any way, unless a sufficient reason justifies such an action.

See p. 411.

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5 is wrong. Please try again.

Which position do the authors NOT hold about organ donation?

    { 1 } - The right of the next of kin in regard to caring for the human body may be superseded by statements made by the person while still alive, or by the needs of society.
    { 2 } - Persons or institutions to whom organ donation is made are required by law to accept the gift or properly dispose of the body.
    { 3 } - Usually the next of kin or the person to whom the corpse is committed for care has the legal right to determine if organs may be removed from the body and if an autopsy may be performed.
    { 4 } - In practice, if the next of kin refuses the request for organ retrieval, even if the deceased person had signed an anatomical gift donation card, hospitals and physicians will usually follow the decision of the next of kin because they fear malpractice charges, even though they are protected from civil and criminal proceedings in such a case by the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act which is law in all 50 states.
    { 5 } - In accord with the respect due to the remains of a human person, no organs should be removed from a corpse, nor should the body be dismembered in any way, unless a sufficient reason justifies such an action.

See p. 410.

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