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The Case Against Euthanasia

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A recent survey by the Canadian Medical Association discovered that “ . . . 44 per cent of doctors would refuse a request for physician-assisted dying . . . ” (Kirkey 2). Euthanasia is defined as assisting a terminally ill patient with dying early. In many countries the legalization of this practice is being debated in many countries. All doctors against assisted suicide, including the 44 percent in Canada, are on the right side of the argument. Euthanasia should not be legalized because it is unnatural, it violates the Hippocratic Oath, and laws are to extensive.
Protecting life is the ethical view of society today, and legalizing euthanasia offsets that. Religious figures have recently welcomed the idea of getting God back into this …show more content…

Lynn Pasquerella, president of Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts, who has a PhD in philosophy states, “ . . . health care providers are likely to experience ever-increasing moral distress over how to abide by the Hippocratic Oath’s enjoinder to first do no harm in a society in which death continues to be viewed as patently un-American” (Wood 3). Doctors who agree with the Hippocratic Oath cannot have any association with euthanasia procedures without going against the oath. In the words of Andy Ho, senior writer of The Straits Times, when doctors assist suicide, they not only violate the Hippocratic Oath to “not to give a lethal drug to anyone if . . . asked, nor will (he) advise such a plan,” but also make killers of themselves (Ho 3). In other words, doctors do not go to medical school to take the lives of treatable patients, but to care for them. Euthanasia goes completely against the significance of all doctors. A complication with existing euthanasia laws is that they are too extensive with not enough restrictions. In many countries euthanasia laws are being extended to include patients who do not meet the criteria. “Belgium’s euthanasia law is being stretched to include patients who are not terminally ill and whose suffering is primarily physiological” (Hamilton 1). Because euthanasia is legalized in some states, it is only a matter of time before conditions are loosened to include children suffering from a

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