The Pros And Cons Of Physician Assisted Suicide

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Imagine yourself anxiously waiting for your test results. All of a sudden the phone rings and you immediately pick up your cell phone to answer the call. The worst news you’ve received in your lifetime reaches your ear; “You’ve been diagnosed with liver cancer and you have less than six months to live,” your doctor pronounces. How do you think patients who are suffering feel when you tell them they can’t take their own lives and end their suffering? It 's kind of like deciding when someone you love should be removed from life support, the only difference is that in this situation, the terminally ill are the ones who make the decision to end their life. Physician Assisted Suicide is the patient’s way of dying with dignity, it’s their life, they …show more content…

I agree that the good faith standard can’t be proven to the fullest extent, but fortunately enough, there are a series of strict regulations that have to be met when making such a request. Some of the most important requisites found in Vicki Lachman’s table 1, found within her article “Physician-Assisted Suicide: Compassionate Liberation or Murder?” are as followed from the Oregon Death with Dignity Act. The patient can only make the voluntary request within the last six months of their lifetime. The request must be presented orally and through written means, then be presented orally once more after a fifteen day period has passed as a way to verify that the patient is certain of their choice. A second opinion from a doctor is also needed to reassure that the patient is terminally ill; psychological counseling is also a need to establish a good state of mind where the patient’s decision isn’t clouded by depression (122). These safeguards were implemented especially to counter the negative intentions of not all but some …show more content…

It’d break my heart to see my mother, father, or any one of my siblings in pain. I see why patients would desire the ability to control their circumstances of death, to die peacefully in the shelter of their home, and accept their foretold death. People argue that it’s against a doctor’s ethics to participate in assisted suicide, to be specific, it goes against their role to prolong life. At the same time, by prolonging the patient’s life, they also prolong the patient’s agonizing and debilitating pain. Now that goes against the doctor’s second fundamental role to “ease pain”. A choice has to be made that goes beyond ethics and dwells into compassion. Would you really think that the patient is “living” when 88.9% of participants are concerned about losing the ability to enjoy life? (Lachman

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