Inclusion of patients with dementia or psychiatric disease.Unbearable suffering to ‘tired of life’.Increased proportion of requests granted.The ‘slippery slope’ is the gradual extension of assisted suicide to widening groups of patients after it is legally permitted for patients designated as terminally ill (Hendin, 1997a).
In contrast, CSD performed with the intention of hastening death or ending life is no different to euthanasia-these are deaths caused by the active intervention of the physician. In contrast, withholding or withdrawing therapy performed with the intention of hastening death or ending life, is no different to euthanasia-these are deaths caused by the active intervention of the physician.Ĭontinuous sedation until death (CSD) for the management of severe and refractory symptoms in the last days or week of life may be entirely clinically appropriate therapy, the possibility of life-shortening being acknowledged, but Withholding or withdrawing therapy may be entirely clinically appropriate, the possibility of life-shortening being acknowledged, but not intended. In contrast, intensified treatment of pain and symptoms performed with the intention of hastening death or ending life, is no different to euthanasia-these are deaths caused by the active intervention of the physician. Intensified treatment of pain and symptoms may be entirely clinically appropriate, the possibility of life-shortening being acknowledged, but not intended. INTENSIFIED TREATMENT OF PAIN AND SYMPTOMS It is ethically and morally no different to In Holland and Belgium, euthanasia is defined as being at the patient’s request, so cases of ‘ending of life without the patient’s explicit request’ have to be counted separately. TERMINATION OF LIFE WITHOUT EXPLICIT REQUEST The performance of assisted suicide by persons other than physicians, as occurs in Switzerland, is ethically and morally equivalent to PAS. It is similarly a deliberate act with the express intention of ending life and is not ethically or morally distinguishable from euthanasia. (equipment, drugs) but the act is completed by the patient. In PAS, the physician provides the necessary knowledge and means Physician-assisted suicide (PAS) is defined as the provision of help by a doctor to a competent patient who has formed a desire to end his or her life (Walton, 1995). The terms ‘active’ and ‘passive’ may be misleading (Walton, 1995). Voluntary otherwise, it is non-voluntary. If it is performed at the dying person's request, it is
Palliative Care and Covid-19 Series - Briefing Notes Compilation.Palliative Care Advocacy: Why Does It Matter?.The IAHPC: Advancing Hospice and Palliative Care Worldwide.Palliative Care in the Developing World.Comprehensive Pain Assessment and Management Course.Global Data Platform to calculate SHS and Palliative Care Need.Pallipedia: Online Palliative Care Dictionary.Global Directory of Educational Programs in Palliative Care.Global Directory of Palliative Care Institutions and Organizations.Consensus-Based Definition of Palliative Care (2019).Palliative Care and Covid-19 Series (2020).
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