![]() |
Re: A Duty To Die?
What's with this "johnny foreigner" crap, it cannot be beyond us to implement a system that sees human beings treated as humanely as animals and as someone whose had to watch family and friends suffer long beyond there being a point we need to have a legal means to end suffering.
|
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
My clear view is that a person who is in pain and with no quality of life left should be allowed to die with dignity. I cannot see why any reasonable person would disagree with this. |
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
|
Re: A Duty To Die?
Euthanasia should only be considered when someone is terminal or has a condition that drastically reduces quality of life to near zero that's it. Any system that allows tired people and blind people to make use of euthanasia is broken and unfit for purpose I'm not sure how anyone could think we would implement a system that lax. Make it a requirement that three doctors need to agree with any patients request for a termination of life hell have one be a psychiatrist who'd be able to better gauge bad reasoning on the part of the patient. It is not impossible to create a system that could work as intended and allow people a dignified end to their lives.
Life is life is not a good enough argument to oppose a euthanasia system life without quality of life is not worth it and keeps people in limbo sometimes for years along with their family dragging out the suffering and damage that can be caused. |
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...uncurable.html I've never argued life is life btw, quite the opposite, some of the examples I've highlighted in this thread a're truely heart breaking but for everyone of them there's another from someone relatively healthy and they're not always from abroad either, there was a nasty tale from this country where a young woman abused the living will system to kill herself whilst medical staff could do nothing but watch. We haven't done enough with improving palliative care to even consider this yet imo and that will be something good that comes out of this whole debate, it can't help but improve palliative care no matter what road we eventually go down. |
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
We Brits are better than that! Proper legislative scrutiny would ensure that the likes of such malpractice would not occur without murder charges swiftly following. If necessary, it may be necessary to have a judge's ruling. |
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
|
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
|
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
Go on, knock yourself out, advance the argument, even just a little bit... |
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
Fortunately, doctors do understand and step up the morphine to bring it about anyway. No doubt, you are appalled. |
Re: A Duty To Die?
Just as some may be coloured by not having been in a position of having to watch family and friends disappear before their eye's I'm coloured by having been in that position more then once and it strongly influenced my viewpoint on this issue. In all my dealings with doctors within the NHS I've never met one who would sign off on ending someone's life without very good and practical reasons I can't speak for doctors in other countries but am confident in the moral and ethical standards in our current system of doctors. Please don't bother with any harold shipman comments as he clearly was not an example of the general standard of doctors anymore then peter sutcliffe represents all of us.
|
Re: A Duty To Die?
Quote:
Let me try it another way. This isn’t Parliament and nobody is asking you to set out legislation. What this is, is a discussion forum. For a discussion to move forwards you have to be able to defend and build on the position you choose to take. Now, your opinion is that euthanasia should be permitted, and that it is ok as long as it is ‘properly regulated’. Fine, if that’s your opinion. But you said that several pages back. The problem is, opinions are like assoles. Everybody has one. So what. If you’re interested in having an actual discussion, as opposed to repeatedly excreting your opinion every eight hours, then you have to develop an argument. One way of doing that is to define, in some way, what you mean by ‘properly regulated’. I’m curious to know whether you’re capable of doing that, or whether, when challenged, your only recourse is to parody and denigrate what you think other people believe. Over to you. |
Re: A Duty To Die?
I assume someone has brought up the idea of having only in the event of a terminal diagnosis and serious degenerative conditions (ALS) where the quality of life declines to a horrible level. The latter being decided by the three doctors system as mentioned above?
|
Re: A Duty To Die?
The Oregon Approach mentioned in this BBC article seems fairly robust.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/ethics/euthanas...lation_1.shtml Quote:
http://www.oregon.gov/oha/PH/PROVIDE...nts/year20.pdf |
Re: A Duty To Die?
I don't know. I think making sure the patient is based on Oregon wouldn't work well for us.
|
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:07. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum