نتایج جستجو برای: active euthanasia

تعداد نتایج: 443046  

2014
Massimo Reichlin

A general rationale is presented for withholding and withdrawing medical treatment in end-of-life situations, and an argument is offered for the moral irrelevance of the distinction, both in the context of pharmaceutical treatments, such as chemotherapy in cancer, and in the context of life-sustaining treatments, such as the artificial ventilator in lateral amyotrophic sclerosis. It is argued t...

Journal: :South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 2017
D W Jordaan

The issue of voluntary active euthanasia was thrust into the public policy arena by the Stransham-Ford lawsuit. The High Court legalised voluntary active euthanasia - however, ostensibly only in the specific case of Mr Stransham-Ford. The Supreme Court of Appeal overturned the High Court judgment on technical grounds, not on the merits. This means that in future the courts can be approached aga...

Journal: :The New England journal of medicine 1975
J Fletcher

Growing use of abortion to prevent births of infants with unfavorable prenatal diagnoses raises ethical questions about active euthanasia for newborn infants with similar impairments. Two opposing ethical arguments are those of Paul Ramsey, who equates genetically indicated abortion with infanticide disapprovingly, and of Joseph Fletcher, who equates the morality of abortion with selective euth...

Journal: :CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne 2011
Young Ho Yun Kyung Hee Han Sohee Park Byeong Woo Park Chi-Heum Cho Sung Kim Dae Ho Lee Soon Nam Lee Eun Sook Lee Jung Hun Kang Si-Young Kim Jung Lim Lee Dae Seog Heo Chang Geol Lee Yeun Keun Lim Sam Yong Kim Jong Soo Choi Hyun Sik Jeong Mison Chun

BACKGROUND Whereas most studies have focused on euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, few have dealt comprehensively with other critical interventions administered at the end of life. We surveyed cancer patients, family caregivers, oncologists and members of the general public to determine their attitudes toward such interventions. METHODS We administered a questionnaire to four groups a...

Journal: :Journal of medical ethics 1981
J Harris

This paper examines some of the arguments advanced and acted upon by doctors concerned in decisions about whether severely handicapped patients should live or die. It criticises the view that 'selective treatment' is morally preferable to infanticide and shows how the standard arguments advanced for this preference fail to sustain it. It argues that the self-deception, which is sometimes cited ...

Journal: :The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners 2000
K J McGlade L Slaney B P Bunting A G Gallagher

BACKGROUND There has been much recent interest in the press and among the profession on the subject of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. The BMA recently conducted a 'consensus conference' over the internet to collect views on physician-assisted suicide. Any surveys to date have addressed a variety of specialties; however, no recent surveys have looked at general practitioner (GP) atti...

Journal: :Social science & medicine 1995
D P Caddell R R Newton

This is a study of American public opinion toward euthanasia and the physician's role in performing it. The authors examine how these attributes are affected by religious affiliation, religious self-perception, political self-perception and education. The data include 8384 American respondents from years 1977, 1978, 1982, 1985 and 1988 of the General Social Survey conducted by the National Opin...

2012
Iftikhar Ahmed

This essay primarily discusses voluntary active euthanasia (VAE); the administration of drugs with the explicit intention to end life at the explicit request of a patient6 and physician assisted suicide (PAS); a variant of VAE where final act of administration of lethal drug is performed by patient and physician merely prescribes or supplies the lethal drug. Euthanasia is discussed with special...

2009
J. P. Moreland

The libertarian view, advocated by philosopher James Rachels, states that there is no morally relevant difference between active and passive euthanasia. Moreover, Rachels says, it is biographical life (which includes a person's aspirations, human relationships, and interests), not biological life (being a human being), that is important from a moral point of view (see Part One, p. 13). And if p...

Journal: :Social science & medicine 2002
Akira Akabayashi

Issues pertaining to euthanasia, assisted suicide, and cessation of life support continue to be a subject of worldwide interest. Euthanasia- particularly "active" euthanasia- is not considered legally or socially acceptable in most countries. In Japan, the first judgment of a case involving euthanasia took place in 1949. Since then there have been another five cases that reached the point of se...

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