Massachusetts May Soon Change How the Nation Dies
Hugh Pickens writes "Lewis M. Cohen reports that this Election Day, Massachusetts is poised to approve the Death With Dignity Act, a modernized, sanitized, politically palatable term that replaces the now-antiquated expression 'physician-assisted suicide.' Oregon's Death With Dignity Act has been in effect for the past 14 years, and the state of Washington followed suit with a similar law in 2008. But the Massachusetts ballot question has the potential to turn death with dignity from a legislative experiment into the new national norm, because the state is the home of America's leading medical publication (the New England Journal of Medicine), hospital (Massachusetts General), and four medical schools (Harvard, Boston University, University of Massachusetts, and Tufts). If the act passes in Massachusetts, other states that have previously had unsuccessful campaigns will certainly be emboldened to revisit this subject. The initiative would allow terminally ill patients with six months or less to live to request from their doctor a prescription for a lethal dose of a drug. Doctors do not have to offer the option at all, and patients must make three requests, two verbal and one written. They must self-administer the drug, which would be ingested. The patients must be deemed capable of making an informed decision. 'It's all about choice,' says George Eighmey, a key player in instituting the Oregon law, defending it against repeal and shepherding it into reality. 'You decide. No one else can decide for you. No can can force you into it, coerce you into it or even suggest it to you unless you make a statement: "I don't want to live like this any more" or "I'm interested in that law out there, doctor, can you give me something to alleviate this pain and suffering."'"
Installed death panels to "disappear" his elderly political opponents just before the election!!!
Or is this aiming to legally protect doctors who are assisting patients?
Predator drone attacks for everyone now.
What drug would they prescribe? And what if a person starts taking it and then changes their mind after half of it? Ideally it would be a drug that does not damage the person if it doesn't kill them. Otherwise botched self administrations might just harm people or make them worse off but still alive. I'm not sure how much of an issue this is, but it seems worth considering.
My dog can still shit in public
Or in other words, we don't like seeing sick old people. So we try to kill them off.
The reason why the elderly who are in medical care don't have dignity is because we as a civilization have setup a structure where such people are considered a drain on society.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
How is this term at all antiquated or even at all inaccurate for this situation?
This is idiotic. People figure this out all the time, they don't need gov't to help them.
Next, we'll have ObamaCare demanding that the Catholics offer this option.
At least this will allow someone to go with their family around (and without the mess).
Of course, doctors have been doing this sort of thing "off the books" forever. When I was a kid and a certain person I knew was dying, his doctor gave him a orders not to let his nurse inject him with this particular syringe of morphine (wink, wink).
What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
I wonder what life insurance companies have to say about this. Specifically, does exercising your right to "die with dignity" automatically cause you to forfeit any life insurance that you might have? If so, that's going to doubly suck for the family you leave behind, especially if you have unpaid debts that'll be passed down to them...
TFA and TFS say "No can can force you into it". Did the speaker misspeak, the publication misquote, or is it a regional dialect like "His shoes need shined"?
Do terminally ill witches get to die with dignity too now or do they still get hanged?
while I completely support choice re: end of life you're kidding yourself if you think hmo lobbyists won't be whipping out the checkbook to move the goal line. the day after scotus upholds a right to physician assisted suicide (or whatever pc euphamism replaces it) all the major hmo(s) will announce they're outsourcing their oncology departments to the texas department of public safety: "mr jones, I'm afraid you have stage 1 {body part} cancer... it has a 95% 5-yr survival rate with modestly priced treatment but we don't want to take any chances so we're sending you to our special facility in huntsville, tx - they're the best in the world at this sort of thing!"
that said I still support this & similar legislation...
http://www.sec.state.ma.us/ele/ele12/ballot_questions_12/quest_2.htm
why are liberals always trying to kill people? the unborn, the elderly, the sick....
very strange indeed...
To be honest I have no problem with this, as long as the law doesn't force doctors to comply. In other words, I am perfectly ok with it not being criminal for a doctor to prescribe a drug like this at the patients request, but the law should not FORCE them to do it. Just as it is up the patient to ask, it should be up to the doctor as to whether they will go along with it.
We'll be able to recycle all those old phone booths into suicide booths!
I highly recommend Terry Pratchett's 2011 documentary "Choosing to Die." You may watch the full film on youtube here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slZnfC-V1SY I found the documentary extremely informative and moving.
Hey lawyers, could a "living will" work here? Would I be able to not proxy my dignified death to someone trusted when I was incapable of doing it myself? From my perspective if a person accepts that death happens to all of us, we owe it to society to leave the world sooner rather than leaving a huge bill to eat away at the inheritance of loved ones.
The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
those statements just sound like they want pain relief. "doctor, can you give me something to alleviate this pain and suffering" I'm sure a lot of people say this everyday. They don't want to die and they might get better.
-- these are only opinions and they might not be mine.
People with strong religious convictions are the ones who have opposed Death With Dignity in other states. They should be free to suffer to death in there own excrement, vomit, and drool if they like. They should also not attempt to control how others choose to live or die.
I am very happy to see this come up and I hope Massachusetts passes this into law. In Canada we've been fighting on-again-off-again legal battles for the right to assisted dying and, so far, we haven't had much luck. It's a tricky subject and not many politicians are willing to tackle it.
I would very much like to see Dying with Dignity laws passed in more areas, not just for the old or the infirm, but for people suffering from terminal cancer or ALS. People who are trapped in their bodies and are either unable to move or who are facing a drawn out, painful existence. I've seen family and friends die slowly and painfully and I wish they had been given the option to have a doctor painlessly help them on their way.
When I reach a point I no longer feel like I'm living, but simply existing, I want the option to end live on my terms. I hope the law allows for this when the time eventually comes.
"Suicide" is considered a loaded term with bad connotations, as people desiring death are considered "mentally ill", so the newspeak term does not include it.
Germans needed the "right to die", and were given "mercy killings" beginning with the parent-approved (and Hitler-approved) death of blind, limbless, convulsing infant Gerhard Kretschmar in July, 1939. How easily we forget that this led to 300,000 "mercy killings" of physically disabled and psychiatric patients (including thousands of children and elderly nursing home residents). The patients were selected by their kindly physicians and psychiatrists for death, and this program was actually the precursor to the mass killings of the Jewish concentration camp prisoners. I highly recommend that you DO NOT read the fascinating chapter on the Nazi killing of disabled children, "The Geranium in the Window", in Fredric Wertham's omnibus review of human violence, "A Sign for Cain" (http://www.amazon.com/Sign-Cain-Exploration-Human-Violence/dp/0026259702). It will give you nightmares for decades.
I hope this spreads to other countries. What is proposed is a good step that I would support 100% if I lived there. My wife works runs a palliative care ward and the stories she tells me about patients wanting legislation like this are common.
When you write "the nation dies", with the singular conjugation for the verb "die", you're implying dying of the nation as a collective entity.
Did you guys even get a GED?
Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
The advantages should be obvious -- it's cheaper for everyone and certainly more enjoyable. What better way to die than while high as a kite and busting a nut inside a foxy coed? Certainly beats spending months in a hospital bed hooked up to a machine.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
Are there editors here to correct grammar? The title and summary are full of mistakes.
Play with god's will.
This is a really charged topic full of misinformation. From religion to media misrepresentation to healthcare to politics to insurance - it is extremely difficult to obtain factual, helpful information for someone who wants to check out easily, cheaply and comfortably. The only thing I'm aware of is helium and when the "powers that be" figure that one out it will either become a controlled substance or outrageously expensive (or both).
Check "Final Exit" by Derek Humphry at your local library or online (http://www.finalexit.org/).
I'll take a lethal dose of THC along with a palate of Oreos. :)
Shouldn't the availability of such "end-of-life" drugs settle the "cruel and unusual" question in death penalty states? I mean if something like Propofol is so pleasant that it is the target of abuse, it should be perfectly fine for a pleasant, relaxing send off when a death row prisoner's time has come.
Bringing it back to "death with dignity", noone will force it, or even suggest it, but LWOP prisoners should also be offered the same option...
(lol - spell check on Propofol offers "Foolproof")
This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
What does a "death with dignity" do to a life insurance contract? Usually, these exclude suicide. So does that mean that people won't do "death with dignity" because their loved ones won't get any insurance they would otherwise?
I would say that when it comes down to it a Doctor saying "Okay ive consulted with 4 of the best folks in this specialty and we came up with this treatment that has a 10% chance of working but a 40% chance of you not surviving the treatment how do you want to proceed???" should include a Waiver of Liability.
In these cases First Do No Harm should include the fact that stretching Life out that is only Technically Life is HARM.
And this is of course why consulting with Dr Daniels is very popular with Cancer and Pediatrics Doctors/Nurses
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
Do I get to watch a movie on a big screen as I die, seeing how beautiful the world once was. Lying in a nice comfy bed with pleasant music as I slowly slip away. Later, they can turn me into soylent green for all you chumps to enjoy!
-- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
If he's terminally ill to the point to want to die, I bet most of them can't write... big flaw there
I have a condition that causes extreme pain. It will never get better. It will get worse. The pain is far worse than an absessed tooth and hits most of my body. It will hit the rest of my body soon.
There is nothing that can be done. Pain medications are ceasing to have much of an effect. It is not going to kill me, just get worse.
Why don't any of these laws cover someone like me?
Massachusetts General is the nation's leading hospital? How is it I've never even heard of this hospital? I live on the west coast, but I've heard of some other east coast hospitals like John Hopkins.
Do not go gently into the night, rage, rage against the dying of the light.
The only death that is dignified is one that is fought against tooth an nail.
pioneers in death with dignity and voting by mail. Now Massachusetts is gonna get all the credit?
There is no upper limit or dosage recommendations for morphine for dying patients. In effect, you are allowed to be killed simply by asking for more and more morphine (once in hospice type care).
The more morphine you get, the worse you seem, the worse you seem, the more morphine you get.... repeat until breathing stops.
But insurance won't pay for the treatments because the option of Death is there?
I've always thought the bans on assisted suicide were stupid. If someone really wants to go, let them. Hell, if a perfectly healthy person really wants to kill themselves, let them. The argument has always been that suicidal people must not be of sound mind. I'd say that so long as they can give any sort of semi-logical reason for wanting to die, let them. Preferably give them a way/place to do it that allows us to quickly harvest their organs. Human life is not special or sacred; it's our free will that should be cherished. Personally, I don't think I'd ever go out like this. If I was terminal, I'd much rather spike a golf ball of heroin or slap a grizzly (and film it). At the very least, load me full of dangerous amounts of psychotropics and see if I say anything profound before I go.
While I am fully for this legislation, I'd want to go one step further. With 18 / 21 a human is allowed to vote, to marry, to become a bankrupt. You name it. What this person is not allowed, is to switch herself off. That is already wrong. Of course, we can't allow this out of a temporary misery; like being left by the partner, losing at the roulette table or just boredom.
Off the cuff I'd argue for 3 counselling sessions, 2 with a doctor and 1 with a psychologist, with a fortnight in between each, to obtain a certificate to legally terminate one's own life. All this 'suicide is wrong' mantra stems from ancient times, and is inherited through religion. The trouble of linking it with a terminal disease is obvious: Who could certify that the life expectancy is 6 months or below? Plus, there are cases when suffering is not necessary terminal (living consciously in an iron lung could be). So, let's not be arbitrary and vague and nannying. Let us legislate what fits into the 21st century, and that is the legal right to fully determine one's own destiny. From cradle (better: adolescence) to grave. Over.
I can't believe what a bunch of ignorant wild speculation is contained in the comments on this page. No one has even bothered to find out what Massachusetts Ballot Question 2 actually proposes. But it's simple enough in a nutshell.
It would be assured that the patient is adult, informed, and competent; ORIGINATES the action HIMSELF; is really facing imminent and certain death as determined by both attending and consulting physicians; confirms his wish three times with plenty of time enforced to think it over; and has to sign a form in the presence of witnesses meeting prescribed qualifications. Medication would be prescribed which would be certain to result in a humane death. I have been told by the opposition it consists of 100 Seconals to dissolve in water and drink promptly[1], but the measure does not appear to specify such. A big overdose of morphine would work just as well if not better (yes, morphine can be taken orally; it just requires more of it). It's what is used now "off the record" in hospitals when a patient is in irreversible unbearable agony and his body is betraying his dignity, if he is lucky enough to have access to a physician or nurse willing to risk everything to REALLY help him the only way that counts. Don't pretend it doesn't and won't happen even without the protection of the law. The law just prevents criminalization of what is one of the kindest and most caring acts it is possible to undertake.
It is prescribed that the death certificate shall specify the cause of death as the diagnosed disease, NOT "suicide". This is important. The patient is not "choosing death". That is HOGWASH. The patient is choosing the MANNER and TIMING of death. That is all. The death is already ordained.
The measure would specifically outlaw (and prescribe punishment for) coercing the patient, forging a patient request, or suppressing a recission by a patient of his own request. It would not allow the active participation in the ending of the patient's life. Contrary to the opposition hysteria, it is specifically NOT, repeat NOT, an assisted suicide measure. It is a lifting of sanction against suicide under controlled circumstances, and an above-board way for the patient to acquire the means without the risk of screwing up and having the effort come out badly. It is nothing MORE than this.
Anyone who opposes this measure is a DAMNED EVIL BASTARD who should rot in hell.
[1] The opposition expresses horror at this "dangerous" (WHA???) method of self termination, as if falling asleep for the final time is some kind of torture.
Insurers, including Medicare, support this. About half of Medicare expenditures occur during the last six months of life. If people can be encouraged to die faster, it will help balance the budget.
I've got karma to burn, and this thing is personal to me.
I take offense to the start of the summary. It is called death with dignity for a reason. There are people out there with very terrible diseases they didn't ask for. For example ALS that robs the victim of the use of their muscles. Over time the diaphragm goes out, and if pneumonia doesn't get the poor soul they eventual die from lack of oxygen, much like drowning. The sick and twisted part is while the person can feel the pain they can't even express their discomfort. My father has ALS. I may have it some day. I live in Oregon and I'm proud that this law gives me and my father a chance to end things on our own terms without saddling our loved ones with even more medical bills.
To this point my father hasn't asked for this; however, when the time comes he can. There's no reason we shouldn't allow that. It is far less dangerous than eating a bullet and gives family time to prepare. Fuck the submitter. It is about dignity.
=================
Unix is very user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are.
One slight item missing from the article...
"Due to the fear of mass suicides from the mental anguish caused by elections, the Death With Dignity Act would be suspended three months prior to all elections. "Not wanting to live like this (being exposed to non-stop presidential advertisements)" would not be sufficient excuse to superseded a very important aspect of the law, said spokesperson Dr. Marcia Angell. Everyone choosing this option must be "deemed capable of making an informed decision." It's well documented that during an election season, this is virtually, if not completely impossible."
Many states (Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia) still use the electric chair, which is *extremely* painful and would constitute a torturous death in any more rational country.
had the ability, when they realized that their time came, to lay down and die peacefully at will.
But I suppose in Massachusetts the blood of Numenor does not run true.
Used to be that doctors, who hold control over the life and death of many, had to take the Hippocratic oath that they would not abuse their power. Now the oath is all but defunct, and many medical schools don't even require the oath. With legislation such as this, there is no way after the fact to ascertain whether the patient actually asked for death or not, and even whether the condition is critical is often a judgment call of the doc. Under the guise of humanitarianism, such legislation removes the checks, as slight as they may seem, that keep a doctor from abusing their power. For a forum that uses the slightest provocation to complain about the erosion of our rights, you all seem remarkably silent about the erosion of your very right to life!
That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.
Life is great! (as told by Lady Susan)
Human beings are of no intrinsic value other then what they decide , and there is not such thing and right and wrong.
I for one look forward to living in a society where the STATE has the right to decide what it does and does not need
to 'die with dignity'. Then we can get rid of the dead weight by creating bills that rid the dead weight.
Can I submit my request in meme form?
http://goo.gl/uz4Wr
Oh! I didn't realize that it was the phrasing that made suicide unpalatable!
It should be a fundamental human right that people should be able to choose how, when and where they end their life...Whether they are facing a terminal illness or they are healthy and just tired of living.
Another nail in the coffin of higher moral calling of the Hippocratic Oath. In a day when we change the meaning and intent of very clear statements of moral commitment, it is sad to see those that have sworn to do no harm bend those rules to meet our degrading cultural norms instead of sticking to those oaths to attempt to lift the our commitment to honorable code as a whole. When I look at a society that has an attitiude toward life that doesn't value it unless it is convenient and easy to confront, I see a society that is tearing itself down. "I will give no deadly medicine to any one if asked, nor suggest any such counsel..." Of course our modern "wisdom" has disdain for any wisdom that comes before it. We are so enlightened after all.
We should learn what we need to know about issues, before we decide what we need to feel about them.
You'd think a country that executes prisoners humanely (as much as I'm opposed to death penalty, atleast they're not tortured) would want the atleast the same humane treatment for it's citizens that actually choose to die.
Given that this is the US we're talking about, which has the Second Amendment, why don't the people who want to off themselves simply by a .45 calibre gun and one bullet? If you want less of a mess, a .22 into the temple should be as effective.
I'm neutral on the issue, but I think it's worth looking at an alternate view on the issue: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/01/opinion/suicide-by-choice-not-so-fast.html (Pay Wall)
NEXT week, voters in Massachusetts will decide whether to adopt an assisted-suicide law. As a good pro-choice liberal, I ought to support the effort. But as a lifelong disabled person, I cannot.
There are solid arguments in favor. No one will be coerced into taking a poison pill, supporters insist. The “right to die” will apply only to those with six months to live or less. Doctors will take into account the possibility of depression. There is no slippery slope.
Fair enough, but I remain skeptical. There’s been scant evidence of abuse so far in Oregon, Washington and Montana, the three states where physician-assisted death is already legal, but abuse — whether spousal, child or elder — is notoriously underreported, and evidence is difficult to come by. What’s more, Massachusetts registered nearly 20,000 cases of elder abuse in 2010 alone.
My problem, ultimately, is this: I’ve lived so close to death for so long that I know how thin and porous the border between coercion and free choice is, how easy it is for someone to inadvertently influence you to feel devalued and hopeless — to pressure you ever so slightly but decidedly into being “reasonable,” to unburdening others, to “letting go.”
Perhaps, as advocates contend, you can’t understand why anyone would push for assisted-suicide legislation until you’ve seen a loved one suffer. But you also can’t truly conceive of the many subtle forces — invariably well meaning, kindhearted, even gentle, yet as persuasive as a tsunami — that emerge when your physical autonomy is hopelessly compromised.
I was born with a congenital neuromuscular weakness called spinal muscular atrophy. I’ve never walked or stood or had much use of my hands. Roughly half the babies who exhibit symptoms as I did don’t live past age 2. Not only did I survive, but the progression of my disease slowed dramatically when I was about 6 years old, astounding doctors. Today, at nearly 50, I’m a husband, father, journalist and author.
Yet I’m more fragile now than I was in infancy. No longer able to hold a pencil, I’m writing this with a voice-controlled computer. Every swallow of food, sometimes every breath, can become a battle. And a few years ago, when a surgical blunder put me into a coma from septic shock, the doctors seriously questioned whether it was worth trying to extend my life. My existence seemed pretty tenuous anyway, they figured. They didn’t know about my family, my career, my aspirations.
Fortunately, they asked my wife, who knows exactly how I feel. She convinced them to proceed “full code,” as she’s learned to say, to keep me alive using any and all means necessary.
From this I learned how easy it is to be perceived as someone whose quality of life is untenable, even or perhaps especially by doctors. Indeed, I hear it from them all the time — “How have you survived so long? Wow, you must put up with a lot!” — even during routine office visits, when all I’ve asked for is an antibiotic for a sinus infection. Strangers don’t treat me this way, but doctors feel entitled to render judgments and voice their opinions. To them, I suppose, I must represent a failure of their profession, which is shortsighted. I am more than my diagnosis and my prognosis.
This is but one of many invisible forces of coercion. Others include that certain look of exhaustion in a loved one’s eyes, or the way nurses and friends sigh in your presence while you’re zoned out in a hospital bed. All these can cast a dangerous cloud of depression upon even the most cheery of optimists, a situation clinicians
If I had something like ALS I would want to live until I was no longer able to take my own life, then it would be time to end it. This law would result in me robbing myself of the last few days or weeks of life when I could still do things for myself.
What is real suffering...knowing that life is so inconsequential that we offer it like a candy bar at checkout, or that we can merely go from legal, to encouraged, to necessary because we need to save some $$$ to purchase more Chevy Volts? I find it encouraging that despite common sense people generally dismiss their initial reaction as a fallacy...it won't be too long now.
I don't sympathize with those who say there's a need to start injecting patients with lethal drugs (or going out of our way to give people the opportunity to kill themselves that way). But I definitely do support people's ability to choose to refuse medical support and/or treatment - including food and water. Without that support, a natural death follows within a week or two.
Death by dehydration is much more peaceful and less painful than you'd think, esp. with a bit of palliative care. It's less traumatic and painful than many euthanasia techniques. Yes, it's slower than assisted suicide, but a couple of weeks of that is far from the "years of acute suffering without dignity" that euthanasia advocates wax grandiloquent about, and I don't think we should be in the business of causing quick deaths. Anyone who is unwilling to face a few days of dehydration before death really should reconsider whether their desire for death is sufficiently strong to act on.
Even in places where physician-assisted suicide is legal, studies have shown that when presented with the option more patients choose to forgo nutrition and die naturally (one example study in Oregon- "Terminally Ill Choose Fasting Over M.D.-Assisted Suicide", Psychiatric News).
For many people involved in euthanasia/ assisted suicide debates, the core issue is the distinction between choosing not to take actions to continue to sustain life and choosing to take actions to end life. Unless you wrap it in lots of euphemisms (like the title of the act under discussion) most people will voice moral objections to the latter. But even the Catholic Church recognizes that there's a point at which food and water are no longer providing a real benefit and using them is no longer morally obligatory. They and others will loudly disagree with each other about when that point comes, but we should be able to agree that individuals should be able to make that decision for themselves.
Unfortunately, both extremes of the euthanasia/assisted suicide debate have made efforts to keep people from seeing this as a real option, and while courts have usually upheld terminal patients' right to refuse food, water, feeding tubes, IVs, etc., there have been some poor laws and precedents that have muddied the waters somewhat. We ought to work to clear the legal waters, the misconceptions, and the disinformation.
We also ought to strongly encourage all adults to take some time thinking about these kinds of things and come up with a living will. Dealing with these kinds of questions after somebody who never made their intentions clear beforehand becomes unable to make the decision on their own inevitably leads to morally messy and personally nasty disagreements.
From TFA:
. . . and patients must make three requests, two verbal and one written. They must self-administer the drug, which would be ingested. The patients must be deemed capable of making an informed decision.
I can think of a lot of critically ill patients who would be incapable of meeting these criteria. What if you've had your vocal cords removed due to throat cancer, or if you have locked in syndrome or are otherwise paralyzed?
Where's the option of making a living will where you can lodge a request to be euthanized before your physical faculties fail you? What about the comatose patients who have no hope of cure but are bankrupting their families by massive medical bills while they're taking up a hospital bed?
Patient: "I'm interested in that law out there, doctor, can you give me something to alleviate this pain and suffering." Doctor: "I already told you, the blister on your toe will go away in a few days. And besides, it's not a good enough excuse."
Eyes Open Self-Hypnosis for Victory: Summon the Warrior
get a big bottle of tylenol, ingest all, wait ...
Three problems with this laws:
1. There are no effective controls to ensure that a patient is not delusional (due to bad combination of meds) or is not having some temporary mental issues.
2. The Massachusetts legislature refused to perform their duty to craft a law that makes sense. The reason this is a ballot initiative is because they refused to act. It was too much of a hot potato for an election year...
3. In Massachusetts, the law governing the "Humane Disposition of Greyhounds" (former racing dogs) contains 1819 words, the proposed law governing "Physician Assisted Suicide" contains 613 words. Not a real objective measure, but at one level there seems to be greater control around the killing of a dog than killing of a human being.
Euthanasia needs to be extended to people suffering from chronic illness. As someone with severe Crohn's Disease who spent three years more ill than you can probably imagine if you haven't been there (constant fevers of 102-104F, diarrhea 20-30 times / day with seconds of warning, severely low iron requiring monthly blood transfusions, constant pain that was not properly controlled even by high doses of opiates, inability to eat - my weight dropped to 130 lbs and I'm 6'2", etc), I sympathize with the terminally ill, but when you have a chronic illness - especially one that does not respond well to medication - and your life is essentially a long road without dignity, support, or hope, you need the option to choose your own death - especially in a country like the US that does not offer decent medical care to its citizens.
I would strongly prefer to have cancer to Crohn's: at least with cancer, there is a winner, i.e. either you or the disease. With a chronic autoimmune disease, it's like a neverending battle of enough illness to incapacitate you completely, but never quite enough to cause you to die.
The only thing that kept me going during those three years was suicidal ideation, as it was a choice that I could make when it felt that I had no options and was otherwise completely helpless and powerless. The knowledge that I could kill myself if I chose to was the warm, fuzzy blanket that made it tolerable, and I spent much time researching and collecting things to give me the power to make that decision. I did ultimately try to kill myself and failed, but wish that I hadn't.
I'm fortunate enough to be healthy (relatively speaking) now, although I will have an ileostomy for life. It's not a nice thing at all, but given what I had to endure beforehand, it's such a tiny price to pay for the ability to live now that not a day goes by where I'm not thankful for it, even through the embarrassing incidents that arise as a result.
Now that we can die with dignity, how about we focus on changes that will allow us to live with dignity as well?
Otherwise known as the hurry and and die, we need more room for Obamacare patients.
Mr Burns: "This man is costing my health plan five thousand dollars a day. I demand that he die with dignity!"
...the stupid college kids who voted for Obama in 2008 are old farts; not only WILL "end of life" "arrangements" be suggested (contrary to the links above AND as REQUIRED by Obamacare) but both Social Security and Medicare will both be gone (even Obama's people have admitted this under oath in congressional testimony) so the obvious way to deal with old folks will be via some quasi-religious euthanasia ceremony... perhaps they'll call it "carousel" ...
Sure, nobody pushing Obamacare will say it has anything to do with eliminating the old and infirm... and nobody who advocates for the various "death with dignity" proposals will tie it, in the other direction, to Obamacare... but decades after both pieces are in place a future group of politicians will feel free to tie the two together. This is how these things ALWAYS go. Social Security opponents originally warned that an SS# would eventually become a citizen ID number and that the program would eventually be widened to provide more and more benefits until it became financially un-sound; Proponents demanded that no such thing would happen and to prove it they made it illegal to use the SS# for any purpose other than Social Security. Years later though, the laws were changed by other politicians to allow banks and credit card companies to use the numbers, and later the military was ordered to use the SS# for each soldier instead of assigning each a serial number when he joined (this change was justified as an efficiency and cost-saving maneuver). Now, the government and business use your SS# as your citizen ID# (just as the original "crazy" and "paranoid" opponents said would happen). Oh, and they widened the scope of Social Security so that widows, Orphans, the disabled and certain immigrants could collect while not adjusting the retirement age to keep page with lifespan (effectively broadening the program) and it is now in the red and due to be bankrupt long before many Slashdotters reach retirement age.
Excuse me. How is suicide selfish? It's your life, no one elses, so you should be able to end it how and when you want. Especially if you're experiencing pain that no drug will relieve. In fact, I'd say it would be selfish of the living to force someone to stay in that kind of pain.
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I am not a doctor, but there are a few medical schools in my state, therefor I am authority to decide these issues?
Just grab a bottle of aspirin, eat the whole thing and drink some alcohol. Or you could jump off the roof of the hospital, or slit your wrists (the proper way), stab your heart and hope to die, grab some draino from the janitor's supply, or just crawl out of the hospital and make your way to the forest somehow and let nature take its course. But if you want to die in style, have a bottle of powerade, drink it all and hold it in one hand while sticking a fork in the outlet with the other.
The issue in Massachusetts, which has government provided universal health care, is that patient assisted suicide is a whole hell of a lot cheaper than treating a really sick patient. There will be pressure to let patients die. No problem, except that a patient in great distress is hardly a good judge of his or her recovery possibility. Also, by withholding pain meds (which they do) a patient can be too easily driven to sign the suicide form.
I hope the law guards this slippery slope adequately.
So instead they should selflessly suffer unspeakable physical or emotional pain indefinitely to save their loved ones from self-deluded guilt? Assuming of course the suffering has nothing to do with their loved ones, any guilt is purely a symptom of their own overinflated sense of importance, and is hardly the fault of the person that committed suicide.
Really though that's beside the point in the context of physician assisted suicide. We're talking about people who's imminent death is unavoidable - either they die gracefully in the time, place and manner of their choosing, or they waste away suffering horribly. They're not going to enjoy their remaining days, and if their loved ones have any shred of empathy neither will they. So what exactly is the point of "soldiering on"?
Our culture has an unhealthy horror of death, but it's by no means "natural" or "right". Many cultures have fully embraced the idea that individuals should be allowed to choose the time of their passing, and even animals will do so. At some point many elderly individuals human or otherwise simply lose interest in continued survival - their story has run it's course and there's no longer any real purpose to their continued existence so they stop maintaining it. Typically they will simply lose interest in eating and quietly waste away - generally seeking out some secluded spot with the last of their strength wanes so they can pass in peace. Should such individuals force themselves to continue to survive just so that their grandkids can continue to visit them on Christmas? Asking *that* of them is the height of selfishness.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
The normal constraint in these circumstances is the amount of money that an individual has. However, we as a society have determined that the test is not the financial worth of the individual, but their quality of life. While that is definitely a better test, there can often be a disconnect between the individual's will to live and what someone else expects it to be.
I admire your will to live. Even though I am physically 100%, I still have trouble getting up every morning looking forward to the same old shit every day and occasionally long for the eternal sleep.
one step at a time. We're talking about a cultural shift that does in fact have some potential for abuse, let's get it passed and some precedent established with those patients who can unequivocally express their current desires before we start expanding the scope.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
"How is suicide selfish? It's your life, no one elses, so you should be able to end it how and when you want."
That is exactly what people going down the selfish path to suicide are thinking. But it isn't about whether or not you have the right. It is about what happens afterward, the permanent emotional damage to those you love. My comments were primarily targeted at people going through emotional pain. Terminal illness and physical pain are something else altogether.