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Doctor-assisted suicide
This can be a very sensitive topic so please be respectful of others opinions and views.
So, in Canada the Supreme Court is looking to pass a bill for doctors to help patients in assisted suicide under certain conditions. Awhile back in B.C (British Columbia) someone wanted her doctor to help her die because of her terminal illness which caused her a lot of pain. Since, lawyers and others brought to the Parliament of Canada to allow doctors to assist with suicide for patients. It was set as high importance for the Supreme Court and in this article it talks more about it, in depth. I am very happy about this, I am glad Canada is doing this. Another step forward for us Canadians and our rights. |
Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
While I'm an advocate of rights and freedom, I'm a little ambivalent when it comes to this topic. I stumble because I believe it should be legal whole heartedly but if it was someone I cared about I would find myself trying to talk them out of it. As much as I believe in freedom of choice I would not be so easily accepting if it was someone who told me their plan for it. I would treat it as a suicide for any other reason. But if it were me I would be angry if someone is pushing me to not do something. Maybe it is a human fault in me but I won't let myself just be like okay cool about it.
As for governments controlling that choice, that I'm against. In that regard it should be legal. In the regard of a family deciding while a person is in coma and did not specifically ask for it, I would be against. Because if they can't tell you, and the doctor just wants to do it for economical purposes (happened to someone I know) and they pressure the family then I'm against that. |
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This is great to hear! People have the right to be able to die iwth dignity, and if they're suffering and in pain from a terminal illness, they have the right to choose to not continue in pain.
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Not gonna lie, I despise these laws.
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Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
Much as I sympathise with the aims of the assisted suicide movement, and can understand the appeal of having that option, the following issues continue to bother me about it (and I've yet to receive a convincing response to them, so any comments would be welcome):
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Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
My main problem with this is that you have to be 'competent' as the article describes. For those with incurable, end stage dementia, they still have to suffer because they are not 'competent'.
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Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
I'm supportive of doctor assisted suicide, but I think there does need to be a criteria for being eligible for such a thing. For example, I don't think doctor assisted suicide should be an option for people who are depressed or are otherwise suffering from mental illness. I think it should be reserved for the terminally ill or those who have a documented illness with no prognosis of getting better that causes a lot of physical pain and possibly psychological anguish. I think the only exception to the "physical pain" rule should be dementia.
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My dad has Multiple Sclerosis, and I've seen him suffer with it for a good few years. I've worked hard to empathise with that, because I think it's important when considering this sort of proposal. I am personally in favour of a safeguarded way for the painfully and terminally ill to die sooner and more peacefully than they otherwise would. One reason for this is my personal wish to give everyone as much freedom as is possible, obviously within reason ie. not impacting in a hugely negative way upon others. Personally, I would like to have the option of assisted dying available in case I develop anything similar to what my dad is going through. I'm not saying he should choose assisted dying, or at what point if he did, because that's entirely up to him. I'm just saying that I'd want to be able to make such a choice if I could.
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Even so, I don't think that means we shouldn't have the option. There are many options to which we don't have a "right" per se, but they're available because they improve quality, including quality of life. So, even if we did not provide assisted dying as a universal "right to a dignified death", I don't see a reason why the option of active euthanasia shouldn't be allowed. I can think of reasons why that would make people happier - peace of mind, reducing suffering, etc. I also don't think we need a universal definition of what a "dignified" death is; the point in giving the option is that an individual thinks assisted dying would be more dignified, they can choose it. If you don't think it's dignified, there are other options (ie. palliative care) available to you. The use of "dignity" in the campaigning is simply because those who are part of those organisations are campaigning for the option to die in a way that they collectively see as dignified (or moreso than options currently available). Quote:
So, definitely have safeguards, but actually, the wish to end pain is a perfectly acceptable reason to want to end life, in my opinion. I'm no psychologist, but your example of choosing to give false confession after mental breakdown from torture would perhaps demonstrate a basic animalistic urge to end pain (eg. that inflicted by torture). Quote:
Additionally (and this responds to your second point as well), organisations like [the campaign for] Dignity in Dying already recommend "Advance Decisions". I've already demonstrated that it's possible to rationally decide that death would be preferable to treatment for some individuals (including me!) in some circumstances, so more people making these sorts of instructive documents (as would presumably happen if assisted dying were legalised) would act as a way of safeguarding in the first place. It would be easy for those judging the mental states of those people, because the decision would already have been made (of course, changing their mind would be possible!) - the difficulties you specify would only be for those who hadn't made a decision beforehand. As I've said, there's no evidence to suggest that safeguarding for those people is ineffective in countries where assisted dying is legal. Quote:
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I'm in favour of it, as you may have noticed - but I suspect the things I've said might have been suggested to you before, so I'd be interested to see why you haven't deemed them sufficient responses in the past. |
Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
If you want to die why even go to the doctor in the first place and spend all the money on services, and leave your family with the bill? Why waste time that could have been given to people who want the care and make the doctors do something they didn't go to school to do which was see their patients die.
But I think people should make whatever decisions they want to. |
Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
Benefits can come from life, even with any illnesses, injuries or others.
I was in hospital with infection for five days and what I experienced was Depression, no interest in the Foo Fighters and no appetite. Sometimes the physical can impair the emotional and in that regard, I make very little differentiation between this and someone who comes to us for assistance regarding suicidal thoughts. I recommend that any doctor who assists someone with their suicide be stripped of their practising licence and prosecuted in the courts, and I recommend the laws be scrapped. I can't understand how a doctor could possibly do that. |
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Well if the person is going to die anyways- I don't see why this is such a big deal. It can be hard for a family to care for a terminally ill relative. They will have medical bills anyways to pay. It isn't selfish (in my opinion) to have your death prematurely induced. |
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This takes us into the rather thorny topic of "quality of life", and I think this is where we are going to end up agreeing to disagree. I suspect the issue is, in my mind, "quality of life" becomes rather redundant when you're talking about ending it. The act of assisted suicide does not in itself improve quality of life, as the act does not provide for life continuing and so quality cannot conceivably improve (or worsen as the case may be). What it offers instead is a semblance of control over the situation, and I can see how in certain circumstances that may offer someone a sense of feeling their quality of life has improved. But at the same time, it is reliant upon someone retaining their agency until the time comes, and life seldom plays by those rules. A person who has made a decision to end their own life could be struck by a brain stem stroke, for example, rendering them completely incapable of doing anything. Thereafter, their decision becomes somewhat redundant. It may be a rather extreme example, but I guess I just question the wisdom of depicting it as improving quality of life when that doesn't add up. Is it in fact bordering on the territory of a noble lie? Quote:
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As for advance decisions, I fear that is not a particularly good comparison. A refusal to accept treatment (which, admittedly, stems from the right to personal integrity and autonomy that euthanasia proponents rely upon) is based on a notion of "letting nature take its course" - no one is intervening to hasten their demise, it's just happening through an omission. Assisted suicide and euthanasia, by contrast, require a conscious decision to end life prematurely for one reason or another. Refusal is exercising the right to autonomy over oneself; assisted suicide and euthanasia impose said autonomy upon the will of another person (e.g. the physician). That's a different ethical and legal ballpark. Quote:
I suppose the question I'd ask would be: what guarantees are there that funding for such facilities would be maintained? The palliative care movement is, ultimately, underpinned by a belief that maintaining a decent standard of life until a person's life runs its natural course is the right approach to end-of-life care. Doctor-assisted suicide and euthanasia are in direct conflict with such a belief. In circumstances where greater demands are placed on end-of-life care facilities and resources, it wouldn't take much for a more economically-led approach to determine that palliative care isn't such great value compared with doctor-assisted suicide and euthanasia, and as such reduce resources for palliative care facilities. That is already starting to occur in the Netherlands in respect of terminal cancers, according to statements last year by Professor Boer, and as a logical development it's a pretty straightforward transition from euthanasia being a fringe option to euthanasia becoming the default. Particularly when resources are only going to become more stretched in the coming years. Quote:
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Re: Doctor-assisted suicide
I've taken courses regarding dying and have reviewed the laws behind physician assisted suicide, at least in the US.
There are MANY hoops to jump through. You need an affidavit, you need witnesses, you need proof from a doctor that you will not live more than x amount of time and that alternatives are not proven reasonable for your situation. There are meetings, debates, etc to really be sure that you, for lack of a better way, have no other choice other than suffering. In addition, the patient must be the one to consume the fatal dose of medication. The doctor is simply a witness and to confirm death. They CANNOT in ANY way help the patient with the cocktail, for liability purposes of course. So, in this time, the patient may have a change of heart when they stare death in the face. I would not want a loved one to do it over the fact that I'm selfishly attached to them, and I do think that there are other ways to end life without jumping through the legal hoops and spending the money (not that I ever justify suicide). Overall, I am against it. In my opinion it looks romanticized. |
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Furthermore, 84% of Canadians are in favor for doctor-assisted suicide and not many know but what actually started this debate to rise to the Supreme Court is because of the high importance of what happened in British Columbia British Columbia had votes showing 90% to agree to doctor-assisted suicide. If you take a look at the percentiles of the votes and what they voted for and against, many of your answers will be answered. The Supreme Court of Canada isn't going to allow a bill to pass without the safety of others and who might be in danger because of this bill. Many Canadians have pushed the Supreme Court to do something for the last few years. It was brought up back in 1993 but nothing happened. |
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