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Doctor/Medical Assisted Suicide
This spans beyond Dr. Jack Kevorkian.
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******** There is so much that goes into this topic. GCers, what do you think about the states that have legalized assisted suicide and the states for which it remains illegal? What do you think about the larger issue of assisted suicide? If you do not want to share your opinion, feel free to just vote in the poll. |
That said, the Washington State law makes a lot of sense. The law only serves people with a terminal diagnosis. There was probably some concern that the law would be expanded to include folks without terminal disease or that doctors and/or insurance companies would pressure folks into selecting life-ending treatment, but that simply hasn't happened. Some are going to object on religious grounds. In states like mine, those folks are going to be in the majority for quite some time.
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I'm not going to express an opinion at this point, but just as an informational note - Oregon was the first state to pass a Death with Dignity Act (1997 I believe). Washington followed in 2009.
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State laws on assisted suicide.
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1994. Oregon was ahead of their time. Quote:
I agree, especially with the bolded. |
Meh. Patients don't need a physician to assist them to commit suicide, IMHO. A physician has a duty to do no harm. I think it puts physicians in a tough position.
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At some point, wouldn't not carrying out the express wishes of the patient when they have a very painful death approaching and a no hope terminal diagnosis actually be harmful? I responded "maybe, depends on the illness" for the record. I don't think physician assisted suicide should be available for anyone without a terminal diagnosis and a short amount of time to live. Once the decision is made, it's awfully tough to reverse course. Also, I don't want anyone with mental illness to think of physician assisted suicide as a means to deal with the symptoms of their illness. |
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Thanks for providing one medical doctor's perspective. |
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Ever hear the phrase "Doing more harm than good"? Physicians have been known to be guilty of that from time to time despite trying to do no harm. In some cases, the best course of treatment for a patient is for that patient to die. Why not let physician assisted suicide ensure the patient's passing is as peaceful as possible? Under the Washington law, the physician isn't actually the person pulling the trigger, so to speak. They simply provide a surefire and pain-free means to an end. The physical act of suicide is done by the patient according to the law, even if that means knocking some pills into the feeding tube or whatever. |
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What many aren't aware of is that often the physician recognizes when artificial life-extending measures are futile and they DO recommend hospice care. It is often the families, who for a whole gamut of reasons (denial, guilt, hope, faith, etc), are unwilling to let the loved one go peacefully and request "full code" status. (this would be the case when loved one is unable to make own medical decisions and next of kin is required) However, hospice care and families unwilling to let grandmama go peacefully is a whole 'nother topic and not what Dr Phil is asking about. Therefore, I won't dereail. Just wanted to clarify that artificial measures to extend life in a futile situation are done at patient and family request, not because a physician just wants to. There is also not a need for physician assisted suicide to allow a patient to die comfortably. Hospice is an excellent alternative. #marriedtoanoncologist #heartragicfamilystoriesdaily |
Blondie93, please feel free to discuss a range of topics that fuel your opinion on physician assisted suicide.
I tried to include other alternatives in the poll. |
I'm for it, not just in terminal illness cases but in severe disability which precludes any quality of life such as quadraplegia at the C1 or C2 level, severe stroke impairment that will not improve, etc. It isn't really possible for all patients to do it by themselves because some are physically unable to obtain the means.
I'm also pro-hospice, but have seen people suffer up until the very last minute, even while hospice was trying to keep them comfortable. If pain is so great that no pain meds can touch it and a patient is terminal and conscious, it's a pretty awful situation. I also think "do no harm" can be interpreted a lot of ways. I also struggle with the religious arguments against it. The argument I usually hear is that it is "playing God" and such things should be left up to God. But I never hear that argument go in the other direction. Most (not all) are ok with taking all kinds of medical extreme measures to prolong a life. Isn't this playing God too? Where do we draw that line? People used to die from all kinds of infections that we now treat easily with penicillin. People died of heart problems that are much more easily treated now. If our time and manner of death is all predetermined, then why treat anything? For these reasons, I don't buy into that argument. I just can't understand where the line is. It's one of my first questions for Him when I die. (I have a whole list of these types of questions) These are all reasons why it is important for people to have patient advocates and Living Wills, if they feel strongly about not being in certain circumstances. |
I think it should be legal under extremely strict conditions. Just some, but not limited to:
-A terminal illness where the patient will die in a set amount of time (Not necessarily the amount, but 3 months as an example) -The choice to be able to choose death in this situation must be signed and document FAR prior to the decision being made. A set amount of time AND that the person has not been yet deemed terminal - they need to make the decision to be able to choose death if they want, when they are of a more sane mind -Over 18, I don't think parents should be able to choose for children. I think any children or ANYONE who is dependent upon someone else's decisions (a mentally retarded person for example) should NOT be eligible for choosing death. It needs to be a decision the person makes themself Some others, but I think if it is legal, these are certain provisions that must be upheld |
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Your entire second paragraph is nonsensical. |
And yet... from the New England Journal of Medicine, an abstract:
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This, of course, was a survey taken a long time ago, even before Oregon legalized physician assisted suicide. It'd be interesting to see where things stand now, but I couldn't find such an article. From the more recent literature, I think you overstate your case when you say the "vast majority" of physicians feel as you do. I've read several polls at this point, some conducted by professional researchers and I might go so far as to say physicians are 60/40 against physician assisted suicide. Quote:
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