Saturday, October 12, 2019
Assisted Suicides :: essays research papers
 Assisted Suicides    The Washington Post September 2-8, 1996      Picture yourself in this situation. You go to the doctor for a routine  physical. You look fine. You feel good. All those exhausting workouts at the  gym are finally starting to pay off and you actually stuck to that low fat, high  vitamin diet you're doctor recommended. You have never felt better. You are  essentially the epitome of a healthy, fit human being. Then, out of nowhere,  you are diagnosed with a disorder of the nervous system accompanied by chronic  fatigue syndrome. The illness is permanent and there is no cure. It will only  progress and worsen with time, and all you can do is wait. What would you do?  If you were 42-year-old Judith Curren, a nurse and mother of two small  children, you'd be in close contact with the infamous suicide assessor, Dr. Jack  Kevorkian, a.k.a. "Doctor Death," discussing your "options." However, according  to an editorial published in The Washington Post, entitled "38 Assisted  Suicides," many people believe that when it comes to matters such as life and  death, there are no options. The decision to live or die is made by God.  Judith Curren didn't agree. With the assistance of Dr. Kevorkian, she died and  the retired pathologist presided at his 38th assisted suicide, fairly confident  that he will not be prosecuted or even suffer public disapproval.  Many of the people who have sought out Dr. Kevorkian have been terribly ill  and suffering, with no hope of long-term survival. Their stories offered  examples that built public sympathy for this cause. But from the beginning,  even among observers who believe that the desperately sick should be given help  to die, there have been questionable cases. For example, a woman in her fifties  allegedly suffering from early Alzheimer's disease was fit enough to play tennis  with her adult son shortly before dying. Another-said to have had a painful,  progressive illness-was found to be free of disease by the county medical  examiner.  The article argued this point, "Is it in any way merciful, compassionate,  or 'healing' (a favorite word of Kevorkian fans) to assist in the suicide of a  middle-aged woman who is tired and depressed and married to a man whom she  recently accused of attacking her and who then delivers her to Dr. Kevorkian?  Pain is controllable. Depression and fatigue can be ameliorated by drugs.  Violent husbands can be prosecuted and divorced. Suicide in such a case is  unreasonable. A doctor's help in that course is unconscionable."  I had mixed feelings on this editorial because I take into consideration  both sides of the argument.  					    
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