388 lines
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388 lines
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [Euthanasia Report ]
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[ ]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [ ]
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[x]11-12 [x]Essay/Report [ ]
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[ ]College [ ]Misc [ ]
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Dizzed: 10/94 # of Words:3069 School: ? State: ?
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<EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>>Chop Here><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
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Euthanasia Term Paper
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A considerable size of society is in favor of Euthanasia mostly because
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they feel that as a democratic country, we as free individuals, have the
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right to decide for ourselves whether or not it is our right to determine
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when to terminate someone's life. The stronger and more widely held
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opinion is against Euthanasia primarily because society feels that it is
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god's task to determine when one of his creations time has come, and we as
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human beings are in no position to behave as god and end someone's life.
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When humans take it upon themselves to shorten their lives or to have
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others to do it for them by withdrawing life-sustaining apparatus, they
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play god. They usurp the divine function, and interfere with the divine
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plan.
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Euthanasia is the practice of painlessly putting to death persons who
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have incurable , painful, or distressing diseases or handicaps. It come
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from the Greek words for 'good' and 'death', and is commonly called mercy
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killing. Voluntary euthanasia may occur when incurably ill persons ask
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their physician, friend or relative , to put them to death. The patients
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or their relatives may ask a doctor to withhold treatment and let them die.
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Many critics of the medical profession contend that too often doctors play
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god on operating tables and in recovery rooms. They argue that no doctor
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should be allowed to decide who lives and who dies.
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The issue of euthanasia is having a tremendous impact on medicine in
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the United States today. It was only in the nineteenth century that the
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word came to be used in the sense of speeding up the process of dying and
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the destruction of so-called useless lives. Today it is defined as the
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deliberate ending of life of a person suffering from an incurable disease.
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A distinction is made between positive, or active, and negative, or
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passive, euthanasia. Positive euthanasia is the deliberate ending of life;
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an action taken to cause death in a person. Negative euthanasia is defined
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as the withholding of life preserving procedures and treatments that would
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prolong the life of one who is incurably and terminally ill and couldn't
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survive without them. The word euthanasia becomes a respectable part of
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our vocabulary in a subtle way, via the phrase ' death with dignity'.
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Tolerance of euthanasia is not limited to our own country. A court case
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in South Africa, s. v. Hatmann (1975), illustrates this quite well. A
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medical practitioner, seeing his eighty-seven year old father suffering
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from terminal cancer of the prostate, injected an overdose of Morphine and
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Thiopental, causing his father's death within seconds. The court charged
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the practitioner as guilty of murder because 'the law is clear that it
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nonetheless constitutes the crime of murder, even if all that an accused
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had done is to hasten the death of a human being who was due to die in any
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event'. In spite of this charge, the court simply imposed a nominal
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sentence; that is, imprisonment until the rising of the court. (Friedman
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246)
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Once any group of human beings is considered unworthy of living, what
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is to stop our society from extending this cruelty to other groups? If the
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mongoloid is to be deprived of his right to life, what of the blind and
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deaf? and What about of the cripple, the retarded, and the senile?
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Courts and moral philosophers alike have long accepted the proposition
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that people have a right to refuse medical treatment they find painful or
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difficult to bear, even if that refusal means certain death. But an
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appellate court in California has gone one controversial step further.
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(Walter 176)
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It ruled that Elizabeth Bouvia, a cerebral palsy victim, had an
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absolute right to refuse a life-sustaining feeding tube as part of her
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privacy rights under the US and California constitutions. This was the
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nation's most sweeping decision in perhaps the most controversial realm of
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the rights explosion: the right to die...
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As individuals and as a society, we have the positive obligation to
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protect life. The second precept is that we have the negative obligation
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not to destroy or injure human life directly, especially the life of the
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innocent and invulnerable. It has been reasoned that the protection of
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innocent life- and therefore, opposition to abortion, murder, suicide, and
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euthanasia- pertains to the common good of society.
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Among the potential effects of a legalised practice of euthanasia are
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the following:
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"Reduced pressure to improve curative or symptomatic treatment". If
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euthanasia had been legal 40 years ago, it is quite possible that there
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would be no hospice movement today. The improvement in terminal care is a
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direct result of attempts made to minimize suffering. If that suffering
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had been extinguished by extinguishing the patients who bore it, then we
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may never have known the advances in the control of pain, nausea,
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breathlessness, and other terminal symptoms that the last twenty years have
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seen. Some diseases that were terminal a few decades ago are now routinely
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cured by newly developed treatments. Earlier acceptance of euthanasia might
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well have undercut the urgency of the research efforts which led to the
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discovery of those treatments. If we accept euthanasia now, we may well
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delay by decades the discovery of effective treatments for those diseases
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that are now terminal. (Brock 76)
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"Abandonment of Hope". Every doctor can tell stories of patients
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expected to die within days who surprise everyone with their extraordinary
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recoveries. Every doctor has experienced the wonderful embarrassment of
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being proven wrong in their pessimistic prognosis. To make euthanasia a
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legitimate option as soon as the prognosis is pessimistic enough is to
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reduce the probability of such extraordinary recoveries from low to zero.
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"Increased fear of hospitals and doctors". Despite all the efforts of
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health education, it seems there will always be a transference of the
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patient's fear of illness from the illness to the doctors and hospitals who
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treat it. This fear is still very real and leads to large numbers of late
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presentations of illnesses that might have been cured if only the patients
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had sought help earlier. To institutionalize euthanasia, however
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carefully, would undoubtedly magnify all the latent fear of doctors and
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hospitals harbored by the public. The inevitable result would be a rise in
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late presentations and, therefore, preventable deaths.
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"Difficulties of oversight and regulation". Both the Dutch and the
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California proposals list sets of precautions designed to prevent abuses.
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They acknowledge that such are a possibility. The history of legal
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"loopholes" is not a cheering one. Abuses might arise when the patient is
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wealthy and an inheritance is at stake, when the doctor has made mistakes
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in diagnosis and treatment and hopes to avoid detection, when insurance
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coverage for treatment costs is about to expire, and in a host of other
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circumstances. (Maguire 321)
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"Pressure on the Patient". Both sets of proposals seek to limit the
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influence of the patient's family on the decision, again acknowledging the
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risks posed by such influences. Families have all kinds of subtle ways,
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conscious and unconscious, of putting pressure on a patient to request
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euthanasia and relive them of the financial and social burden of care.
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Many patients already feel guilty for imposing burdens on those on those
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who care for them, even when the families are happy to bear the burden. To
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provide an avenue for the discharge of that guilt in a request for
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euthanasia is to risk putting to death a great many patients who do not
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wish to die.
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"Conflict with aims of medicine". The pro-euthanasia movement
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cheerfully hands the dirty work of the actual killing to the doctors who by
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and large , neither seek nor welcome the responsibility. There is little
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examination of the psychological stresses imposed on those whose training
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and professional outlook are geared to the saving of lives by asking them
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to start taking lives on a regular basis. Euthanasia advocates seem very
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confident that doctors can be relied on to make the enormous efforts
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sometimes necessary to save some lives, while at the same time assenting to
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requests to take other lives. Such confidence reflects, perhaps, a high
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opinion of doctor's psychic robustness, but it is a confidence seriously
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undermined by the shocking rates of depression, suicide, alcoholism, drug
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addiction, and marital discord consistently recorded among this group.
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"Dangers of Societal Acceptance". It must never be forgotten that
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doctors, nurses, and hospital administrators have personal lives, homes and
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families, or that they are something more than just doctors, nurses, or
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hospital administrators. They are citizens and a significant part of the
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society around them. We should be very worried about what the
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institutionalization of euthanasia will do to society, in general , how
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will we regard murderers? (Brody 89)
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"The Slippery Slope". How long after acceptance of voluntary euthanasia
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will we hear the calls for non-voluntary euthanasia? There are thousands of
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comatose or demented patients sustained by little more than good nursing
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care. They are an enormous financial and social burden. How long will the
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advocates of euthanasia be arguing that we should "assist them in dying".
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"Costs and Benefits". Perhaps the most disturbing risk of all is posed
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by the growing concern over medical costs. Euthanasia is, after all, a very
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cheap service. The cost of a dose of barbiturates and curare and the few
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hours in a hospital bed that it takes them to act is minute compared to the
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massive bills incurred by many patients in the last weeks and months of
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their lives. Already in Britain, There is a serious under- provision of
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expensive therapies like renal dialysis and intensive care, with the result
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that many otherwise preventable deaths occur. Legalizing euthanasia would
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save substantial financial resources which could be diverted to more
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"useful" treatments. These economic concerns already exert pressure to
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accept euthanasia, and, if accepted, they will inevitability tend to
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enlarge the category of patients for whom euthanasia is permitted...
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"Do not tolerate killing". Now is the time for the medical profession
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to rally in defense of its fundamental moral principles, to repudiate any
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and all acts of direct and intentional killing by physicians and their
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agents. We call on the profession and its leadership to obtain the best
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advice, regarding both theory and practice, about how to defend the
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profession's moral center and to resist growing pressures both from without
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and from within. We call on fellow physicians to say that we will not
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deliberately kill. We must say also to each of our fellow physicians that
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we will not tolerate killing of patients and that we shall take
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disciplinary action against doctors who kill. (Chapman 209)
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On the other hand some people strongly feel that euthanasia is not bad
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and should not be looked down upon.
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Are there no conditions when life is meaningless and should be quietly
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ended? If a person is subject to pain that won't stop as a result of a
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disease that can't be cured, must he or she suffer that pain as long as
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possible when there are gentle ways of putting an end to life? If a person
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suffers from a disease that deprives him or her of all memory and makes him
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or her a helpless lump of flesh that may live on for years.
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If euthanasia were legalized,it should be admitted that there might
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be some abuses of virtually every social practice. There is no absolute
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guarantee against that. But we do not normally think that a social
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practice should be precluded simply because it might sometimes be abused.
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The crucial issue is whether the evil of the abuses would be so great as to
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outweigh the benefit of the practice. In the case of euthanasia, the
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question is whether the abuses, or the consequences generally, would be so
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numerous as to outweigh the advantages of legalization. The choice is not
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between a present policy that is benign and an alternative that is
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potentially dangerous. The present policy had it's evils, too.
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We spend more than a billion dollars a day for health car while our
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teachers are underpaid, and our industrial plants are rusty. This should
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not continue. There is something fundamentally unsustainable about a
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society that moves its basic value-producing industries overseas yet
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continues to manufacture artificial hearts at home. We have money to give
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smokers heart transplants but no money to retool out steel mills. We train
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more doctors and lawyers than we need but fewer teachers. On any given
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day, 30 to 40 percent of the hospital beds in America are empty, but our
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classrooms are overcrowded and our transportation systems are
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deteriorating. We are great at treating sick people, but we are not that
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great at treating a sick economy. And we are not succeeding in
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international trade. When you really look around and try to find
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industries the United States is succeeding in, you discover that they are
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very few and far between.(Lamm 133)
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There is no way we are going to come to grips with this problem until
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we also look at some of these areas that aren't going to go away . One of
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the toughest of these is what Victor Fuchs called "flat-of-the-curve
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medicine"- those medical procedures which are the highest in cost but
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achieve little or no improvement in health status. He says that they must
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be reduced or eliminated. We must demand that professional societies and
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licensing authorities establish some norms and standards for diagnostic and
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therapeutic practice that encompass both costs and medicine. Wer'e going
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to have to come up with some sort of concept of cost-effective medicine.
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Individuals have the right to decide about their own lives and deaths.
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What more basic right is there than to decide if you're going to live?
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There is none. A person under a death sentence who's being kept alive,
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through so called heroic measures certainly has a fundamental right to say,
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"Enough's enough. The treatment's worse than the disease. Leave me alone.
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Let me die!". Ironically, those who deny the terminally ill this right do
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so out of a sense of high morality. Don't they see that, in denying the
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gravely ill and suffering the right to release themselves from pain, they
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commit the greatest crime?
|
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The period of suffering can be shortened. If you have ever been in a
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terminal cancer ward, It's grim but enlightening. Anyone who's been there
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|
can know how much people can suffer before they die. And not just
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physically. The emotional, even spiritual, agony is often worse. Today
|
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our medical hardware is so sophisticated that the period of suffering can
|
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be extended beyond the limit of human endurance. What's the point of
|
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|
allowing someone a few more months or days or hours of so-called life when
|
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death is inevitable? There's no point. In fact, it's downright inhumane.
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When someone under such conditions asks to be allowed to die, it's far more
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humane to honor that request than to deny it.(Barry 405)
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|
People have a right to die with dignity. Nobody wants to end up
|
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|
plugged into machines and wired to tubes. Who wants to spend their last
|
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|
days lying in a hospital bed wasting away to something that's hardly
|
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|
recognizable as a human being, let alone his or her former self? Nobody.
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|
The very thought insults the whole concept of what it means to be human.
|
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|
People are entitled to dignity, in life and in death. Just as we respect
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|
people's right to live with dignity, so we must respect their right to die
|
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|
with dignity. In the case of the terminally ill, that means people have
|
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|
the right to refuse life-sustaining treatment when it's apparent to them
|
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|
that all the treatment is doing is destroying their dignity, and reducing
|
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|
them to some subhuman level of humanity.
|
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|
|
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|
The reasons just stated in favor of euthanasia are often over looked
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|
due to the following arguments that are against euthanasia.
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|
The way you talk you'd think people have absolute right over their
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|
bodies and lives. But that is obviously just not true. No individual has
|
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|
absolute freedom. Even the patient's Bill of Rights, which was drawn up by
|
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|
the American Hospital Association, recognizes this. Although it
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|
acknowledges that patients have the right to refuse treatment, the document
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|
also realizes that they have this right and freedom only to the extent
|
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|
permitted by law. Maybe people should be allowed to die if they want to.But
|
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|
if so, it's not because they have an absolute right to dispose of
|
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|
themselves if they want to.(Brock 73)
|
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|
|
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|
Only a fool would minimize the agony that many terminally ill patient
|
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|
endure. And there's no question that by letting them die on request we
|
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|
shorten the period of suffering. But we also shorten their lives. Can you
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|
seriously argue that the saving of pain is greater good than the saving of
|
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|
life? Or that presence of pain is worse than the loss of life? Of course,
|
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|
nobody likes to see a creature suffer, especially when the creature has
|
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|
requested a halt to the suffering. But we have to keep our priorities
|
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|
straight.
|
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|
|
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|
Pro euthanasianists make it sound as though the superhuman efforts made
|
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|
to keep people alive are not worthy of human beings. What could be more
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|
respectful of human life, than to maintain life against all odds, and
|
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|
against all hope? All of life is a struggle and a gamble. At the gaming
|
|||
|
table of life, nobody ever knows what the outcome will be. " Indeed, humans
|
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|
are noblest when they persist in the face of the inevitable. Look at our
|
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|
literature. Reflect on our heroes. They are not those who have
|
|||
|
capitulated but those who have endured. No, there's nothing undignified
|
|||
|
against being hollowed out by a catastrophic disease, about writhing in
|
|||
|
pain, about wishing it would end. The indignity lies in
|
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|
capitulation".(Buchanan 208)
|
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|
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|
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|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Friedman,Emily. Ethics Issues For Health Care Professionals.
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|
Baskerville: American Hospital Publishing, 1986.
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|||
|
Maguire,Daniel. Death By Choice. Garden City: Doubleday &
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|
Company,1984.
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|
|||
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Reich,Warren. Quality Of Life. New York: Paulist Press, 1990.
|
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|
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|
Brody,Baruch. Life And Death Decision Making. New York:
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|
Oxford University Press,1988.
|
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|
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|
Chapman,Carleton. Physicians,Law,& Ethics. New York: New
|
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|
York University Press,1984.
|
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Maestri,William. Choose Life And Not Death. New York:
|
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|
Library Of Congress,1986.
|
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|
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|
Low,Charlotte. Euthanasia - Opposing Viewpoints. San Diego:
|
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|
Greenhaven Press,1989.
|
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|
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|
Brock,Dan. Deciding For Others. Cambridge: Cambridge
|
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|
University Press,1989.
|
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|
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|
Barry,Vincent. Moral Aspects Of Health Care. Belmont:
|
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|
Wadsworth Publishing Company,1982.
|
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|
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|
Current,Richard."Death".The World Book Encyclopedia,1986 ed.
|
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|
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Gibbs,Nancy. "Dr. Death Strikes Again" TIME, 54 (November 4,1991),
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