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Ethical Issues Regarding Physician-Assisted Suicide

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Ethical Issues Regarding Physician- Assisted Death Physician-assisted suicide is defined as the patient’s willingness to end his or her own life with the help of a clinician. The clinician may participate by relaying detailed information on the best way to commit the suicide or by prescribing pills that are of lethal doses. He or she may also be physically of help when the patient commits the act by assisting the patient in setting up medical procedures that cause euthanasia. This form of death became widely popular when the media caught wind of Dr. Kevorkian’s different methods of participation. He helped more than “130 terminally ill patients commit suicide between the years of 1990 and 1998” (McLellan, 2011). When his actions caught …show more content…

There must be no miscommunication and both sides need to come to a clear understanding regarding the issue at hand. Physicians need to listen to what patients have to say in regards to their fears and concerns. Conversely, they also need to “listen carefully to the nature of the request and ask open-ended questions in a calm and nonjudgmental manner to elicit specific information about the request that is being made and the underlying causes for it” (EPEC-O). By asking open-ended questions, the physician will help the patient realize that assisted death is not entirely necessary. This type of listening is therapeutic for the patient, because it allows them to get everything they have to say off of their mind and clear their thoughts. Sharing other stories with the patient at hand is another crucial role for the physician. By sharing tales of other patients, it will ease the anxieties of the patient making it known that they are not the only one going through this type of problem. It is also important that physicians express their own person beliefs in the matter. If they do not believe in assisted death, they can assure the patient that there are other methods to deal with the pain and that the physician will be supporting them up until the time of their death. But, for those who are supporters of this type of treatment, they can help the …show more content…

As sad as it is for me to see this happen, I now understand that it is the circle of life in the medical field. There will be terminally ill patients that will seek years of treatment, but nothing will cure them properly, so they look to this sort of treatment as a last resort to put them out of their pain and misery. This type of treatment has rarely occurred since it became legal in 1994. Since then, 1327 patients in Oregon, 529 in Washington, and only 2 in Vermont have chosen this type of treatment (CNN Library, 2014). Although I will not be an influence towards any patient when they are making their decision, I will still be present in the building, and helping them with their paper work and insurance. The only influence I may have is on the doctors, while they are treating their patients, because ultimately everything they do must go through and administrator. While doing research, I read an astonishing article where “hospital administrators encourage their medical staffs to recommend physician-assisted suicide to hospital in-patients in order to cut down on costs” (Mehlman, 2015). This poses an ethical concern because this type of behavior and thinking is not expressing professional integrity. It is making a decision for the better economical well being of a hospital rather than for the

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