Argumentative Essay On Assisted Dying

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On the 28th October 2015, I finally got the answer to a question that had been exercising my mind for a number of years. On that day I was told that I had incurable cancer and that my life expectancy was unlikely to be years. The irony is that I would not die as a result of Multiple Sclerosis that had plagued me for 17 years but of a disease that had not been diagnosed soon enough for treatment.

I suppose one of the problems of having a chronic disease is that most symptoms such as numbness, cold extremities, nerve pain, fatigue and oedema are dismissed as ‘just your MS’, whereas actually they were symptoms of liver disease which was secondary to an unidentified cancer.

For the 17 years I have lived with MS, I have been thinking of the manner …show more content…

She explained that the Royal College reflected the view of their members and to discover what their thoughts were the College surveyed them on two separate occasions. The first time assisted dying appears on the agenda is approximately 5 years ago and at that time members returned a 70/30 against vote. More recently during the debate of Lord Falconer’s Assisted Dying Bill, the RCP surveyed their members again and although the majority of their members were still against, the vote returned was now 60/40 against which indicated a softening of the attitude towards assisted dying. We talked about the reluctance of doctors to write a lethal prescription and agreed that doctors did not go into medicine to end life but to sustain it. I had noticed that since my diagnosis of incurable cancer doctors were much more willing to prescribe medication which in large enough doses might lead to death. This may be indicate that with the aim of controlling pain doctors are willing to take the risk that the patient might use this medication to end their life. I have since discovered that this is described as a ‘doctrine of double effect’.

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