Assisted Suicide

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ASSISTED SUICIDE

Assisted Suicide

Abstract

Is doctor- assisted lethal injection expectable for terminally ill people? Many find it to be suicide, while others find it a great comfort. Religious beliefs, morals, self-value, and laws have divided in our society by this decision. Is the process better for the patient? Should it be against the law? There are many questions about doctor-assisted lethal injections now we take a closer look to the affects and you can decided.

Introduction

Physician-assisted suicide (PAS) is the intentional termination of a human's life, at the explicit request of the one who dies, with the aid of a physician. The so-called “Doctor Death,” Dr. Jack Kevorkian, brought attention to PAS when he assisted several terminally ill patients end their lives. Kevorkian was imprisoned for his activities.

Related to PAS is euthanasia, from the Greek term for “good death.” Euthanasia is generally defined as including active euthanasia and passive euthanasia. Passive euthanasia is the hastening of death by withdrawing or altering a form of support. This includes removing life support, stopping medical procedures or medications, cutting off food and water, and not giving cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to a person whose heart has stopped. Active euthanasia is the causing of death of a person by way of a direct action, in response to a request from that person. Active euthanasia is usually accomplished by supplying the person wishing to die with the means to end life, often with the help of a medical doctor. The means may include barbiturates, carbon monoxide gas, or comainducing levels of the drug morphine. (Battin, 1991, 298)

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in two companion cases that the states have the right to decide individually on the legality of assisted suicide. The cases were Vacco v. Quill and Washington v. Glucksberg, both decided in 1997. Although the Court did not hold that there is a constitutional right to assisted suicide, it did hold that states can pass their own laws dealing with the subject. The Court wrote that patients did have a right to palliative (pain-reducing) care, even if that care resulted in the hastening of death of the patient. (Breitbart, 1996, 238)

In the United States, only Oregon has legalized physician-assisted suicide. Oregon's Death with Dignity Act, passed in 1996, is a comprehensive piece of legislation outlining the steps patients and physicians must follow to end the life of a terminally ill patient. From 1998 through 2003, 171 terminally ill patients were reported to have died after ingesting lethal doses of medications. Efforts to pass similar legislation in other states have failed. Thirty-eight states have laws that specifically ban assisted suicide by statute. Six states have no laws regarding assisted suicide; other states criminalize assisted suicide through the common law. Of the states that have no laws regarding assisted suicide, most do have laws prohibiting euthanasia. (Chochinov, 1999, 816)

According to statistics released by Oregon, men and women were equally likely to use PAS in Oregon. Terminally ill younger patients were much more likely to request and receive PAS than older citizens; ...
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