Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A brief history of Assisted Suicide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A brief history of Assisted Suicide

    TIME
    March 2 2009


    A BRIEF HISTORY OF
    Assisted Suicide

    By Kate Pickert Tuesday, Mar. 03, 2009


    Mention the term "euthanasia," and the first thing most people think
    of is the epic assisted suicide battle of the 1990s starring Jack
    "Doctor Death" Kevorkian. But the issue of whether human beings ' and
    more pointedly, doctors ' have the right to help others die has been
    in the public discourse since before the birth of Christ. The
    Hippocratic Oath, which scholars estimate was written in the fourth
    century B.C., includes the unambiguous statement: I will not give a
    lethal drug to anyone if I am asked, nor will I advise such a
    plan. (The oath, which most modern doctors do not take, also includes
    a promise not to perform abortions.) (See the Top 10 Medical
    Breakthroughs of 2008)


    The centuries-old debate over a person's right to die, usually in
    cases of painful terminal illness, is currently grabbing headlines
    with the arrest of four members of a group called the Final Exit
    Network. Authorities say the four helped an Atlanta man commit suicide
    last June, which, if proven, would be a violation of Georgia state
    law.

    The idea that it should be illegal to help someone commit suicide is
    most often ascribed to the Biblical Commandment: Thou Shalt Not
    Kill. Despite this, several Judeo-Christian societies have condoned
    assisted suicide in recent years. Australia legalized it in 1995, only
    to rescind the law two years later. The Netherlands and Switzerland
    have decriminalized the practice, paving the way for a British man
    named Craig Ewert to travel to Zurich in December 2008 intent on
    taking his life. Ewert's journey and death were broadcast on British
    television. Although British law makes it illegal to help someone
    commit suicide, authorities have opted not to prosecute Ewert's wife
    and others who have helped loved ones travel abroad for the express
    purpose of committing suicide.

    In the case of Final Exit, according to authorities ' and an
    undercover agent who infiltrated the group ' the four arrestees
    instructed a 58-year-old man how to kill himself using a plastic hood
    filled with helium. The defendants face at least up to five years in
    prison if convicted. It appears the man who died was not terminally
    ill; according to the Associated Press, his doctor told authorities
    that although he suffered from cancer that left his face disfigured,
    he was cancer-free at the time of his suicide.

    The lack of imminent death fueled much of the debate in the 2005 case
    of Terri Schiavo, a Florida woman in a vegetative state whose feeding
    tube was removed ' causing eventual death ' after a protracted legal
    and political battle. Schiavo's husband Michael said Terri would not
    have wanted to be kept alive, while her parents had argued her mental
    capacity could have improved with therapy. Acorss the Atlantic, Eluana
    Englaro, an Italian woman in a similar non-responsive state, died in
    February 2009 under circumstances that mirrored the Schiavo
    case. While "right-to-die" cases are different than "assisted suicide"
    cases ' right-to-die usually refers to the removal of feeding tubes or
    ventilators keeping unconscious or vegetative patients alive, as
    opposed to people actively deciding to end their lives ' the Schiavo
    case and others preceding it have fueled the debate over whether
    humans should have a right to control when they die.

    After ruling in 1997 that Americans do not have a Constitutional right
    to doctor-assisted suicide, the U.S. Supreme Court said in 2006 that
    such cases should be up to the states. Oregon has had a "Death With
    Dignity" law on the books since 1997 that allows terminally ill
    patients to commit suicide with lethal doses of prescribed
    medication. In 2007, some 46 people committed suicide in Oregon under
    the law. Last November Washington voters passed a similar provision
    that allows patients with six or fewer months to live to
    self-administer lethal doses of medication. Washington's former
    governor, Parkinson's sufferer Booth Gardner, stumped for the law,
    while opponents included Martin Sheen, who starred in television
    commercials urging voters to shoot down the initiative.

    Kevorkian, who devised a "suicide machine" to administer lethal doses
    of medication, spent seven years in prison for his efforts, emerging
    in 2007 at the age of 79. He claimed to have helped some 130 people
    commit suicide, but was locked up over one particular case of a
    52-year-old man with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (also known as Lou
    Gehrig's disease) who Kevorkian helped commit suicide. Kevorkian
    videotaped the death and allowed it to be broadcast on 60 Minutes in a
    brazen violation of Michigan law.

    The Final Exit arrestees appear, like Kevorkian, to be prepared and
    planning for a fight. The group has a web site explaining its cause
    and its leader Jerry Dincin has told TIME he considers Final Exit
    members "angels of mercy."

    http://www.time.com/time/nation/arti cle/0,8599,1882684,00.html
Working...
X