Argumentative Essay On Assisted Suicide

1054 Words3 Pages

Wrapped up in complex reasonings of right and wrong assisted suicide tests people’s morality, psyches, and personal experiences. Many of the patients suffering from terminal illnesses could be repressed with the practice of good medicine, which our doctors often do not supply. If patients were to receive proper pain control, better comfort, and emotional support the requests for assisted suicide would significantly drop. Not only would the number of requests for assisted suicides go up if it were legal, if non terminal patients were allowed assisted suicides rates would double even triple. “Do we need to allow patients to kill themselves? We 've all had patients who committed suicide. When I think back honestly, I think they were general failures of pain control, or some aspect of physical or emotional suffering. I don 't disagree with what they did, but they resulted from our failures,” he said (Wolfe).” With a better pain control, better comfort, and better emotional support system our medical care could keep people out of pain and emotional distress in their last days. …show more content…

In Oregon a law was passed the legalize assisted suicide for terminally ill patients. “The act has several safeguards, among them a requirement that the patient’s initial request for a prescription be witnessed by two people; that a second physician concur in the initial diagnosis of a terminal illness giving the patient no more than six months to live; a conclusion that the patient is of sound mind; and a waiting period under which the patient must wait fifteen days before making a second, and final, oral request for the lethal prescription (Walter).” That point is true, but is unimportant because if the patients seek care and get proper pain control, better comfort, and emotional support the patient could live without or with minimal pain and

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