1 / 13

Right to Die: Examining Euthanasia and the Ethics of Assisted Suicide

Explore the complex and sensitive topic of euthanasia, including active and passive euthanasia, assisted suicide, and the importance of palliative care. Should individuals have the right to decide when and how they die? Discover the arguments and values surrounding this issue.

bouie
Download Presentation

Right to Die: Examining Euthanasia and the Ethics of Assisted Suicide

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Platon Jugendforum 2009 WS 3: Alexander, Christina, Verena, Alica, Kilian, Judith, Kristina, Cara, Isabel Euthanasia Should there be a Right to Die?

  2. 30p London, 6th May 20** ANNA IS GOING TO BE KILLED – BUT THERE IS STILL HOPE

  3. Values • Europe = community of values, but often different and incompatible • Values keep changing: • divorce • abortion • The Netherlands: • Decision for euthanasia from 12+ • Euthanasia for babies?

  4. Dignity

  5. Freedom

  6. Respect & Tolerance

  7. Active Euthanasia Active euthanasia occurs in those instances in which someone takes active means, such as a lethal injection, to bring about someone’s death.

  8. Passive Euthanasia Passive euthanasia occurs in those instances in which someone simply refuses to intervene in order to prevent someone’s death.

  9. Assisted Suicide Many patients who want to die are unable to do so without assistance. Assisted suicideis a form of euthanasia where the patient actively takes the last step in their death. Dignitas

  10. Indirect Euthanasia The patient dies sooner as a side effect of giving a medical treatment given to relieve pain or prove end-of-life symptoms.

  11. Alternative: Palliative Care • EAPC (European Association for Palliative Care) • The patients should die in a human and a comforting atmosphere, not feeling alone and unworthy. • End of life should come as soon as possible, but without enforcing the death. • No medical treatment is against the patient‘s will.

  12. Proposal to Lay Down in Law • Right to die for every person • The patient‘s wish of dying must be clear. • A conscious patient has to clearify his wish e.g. in front of two medicals and a notary. • An unconscious patient should have prepared an advanced directive (=Patientenverfügung), where he specifies in which cases he wants to die or if he doesn‘t want to. • Without an advanced directive of an unconscious patient, the relatives – if they exist - have to decide. • Nobody is allowed to act against the patient‘s will.

  13. Euthanasia Right to Die Right to Live

More Related