Persuasive Essay On Euthanasia

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Physician-assisted suicide or euthanasia is the voluntary termination of one 's own life by administration of a lethal substance with the direct or indirect assistance of a physician. Patients suffer daily from implications regarding both mental and physical health. The stigma surrounding euthanasia is that the patients cannot make a well thought out decision because many believe the patients’ thoughts are clouded or that the patients are trying to take advantage of the economic system backing both physician assisted suicide or end-of-life care. Although these claims may contain some truth in regard to certain people, terminally ill patients who deal with some form of physical or psychological pain should have the right to physician-assisted …show more content…

Those who have a terminal illness and are in excruciation pain should have the right to choose to end their lives and the physicians who help them should not be prosecuted. Especially, since people have the right to refuse life-saving treatments, they should also have the freedom to choose when to end their lives. But, someone who is for example, terminally ill, in a hospital setting or even disabled may not be to use this option, either because of mental or physical restrictions. In effect, they are being discriminated against because of their disability. They should be allowed to have the same access of suicide as to people who are not terminally ill have. Terminally ill patients are in a lot pain and/or experience an unbearably poor quality of life. They would prefer to end their life rather than continuing with all of the pain they are dealing with. Does the state have a right to deny them their wish? It is understandable, though tragic, that some patients in extreme duress, such as those suffering from a terminal, painful, debilitating illness may come to decide that death is preferable to life. People debate that pain felt by terminally ill people can be controlled to bearable levels through proper management. They conclude that there is no need for physician-assisted suicide. However, many people in North America do not have access to adequate pain

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