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FREE ESSAY ON EUTHANASIA

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Euthanasia: Whose Choice Should it Be?
This paper analyzes ideas for and against euthanasia and then argues why euthanasia should be a choice for everyone. -- 2,031 words; MLA

Voluntary Euthanasia in the United Kingdom
This paper is an extensive discussion of voluntary euthanasia in the United Kingdom based on secondary research. -- 13,785 words; APA

Euthanasia - Moral Rightness or Wrongness of Robert Latimer's Act
This paper tries to answer the question regarding euthanasia cases: Can euthanasia in any form can be morally acceptable in our society? -- 1,830 words; MLA

Euthanasia
This paper discusses the euthanasia case of Woodrow Collums in terms of the morality of his actions and demonstrates that, while active euthanasia may be illegal, both passive and active euthanasia are not morally wrong. -- 1,550 words; APA

Euthanasia
This paper argues that doctor assisted suicide in the form of passive euthanasia and sometimes active euthanasia should be legalized. -- 995 words; MLA

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EUTHANASIA

Euthanasia has become an issue of increasing attention because of Dr. Jack Kevorkian's
assisted suicides. Dr. Jack Kevorkian, an U.S. physician, has injected physician-assisted
euthanasia sharply into the agenda of public issues widely discussed in the United
States. His activities have brought with them several moral, ethical and legal concerns
regarding this controversial topic. Who has the right to choose death, and under what
circumstances? What responsibility does a physician have to sustain life when witnessing
a patient suffering? What role should law play in this personal matter, and who should
have the authority to control individual wishes regarding his or her own body? Euthanasia
should be legalized so, if we ever have a loved one that is suffering and death is
certain, that we have the choice to ease their pain. 
With the passing of this law that most people would be against the right-to-die, not so.
In a poll cited in a 1998 issue of USA Today, eighty percent of Americans think sometimes
there are circumstances when a patient should be allowed to die, compared to only fifteen
percent think doctors and nurses should always do everything possible to save a person's
life. It also showed that eight in ten adults approve of state laws that allow medical
care for the terminally ill to be removed or withheld, if that is what the patient
wishes, whereas only thirteen percent disapproved of the laws. Also seventy percent think
th4e family should be allowed to make the decision about treatment on behalf of the
patient, while another five percent think this is suitable only in some cases (Colasnto
62).
Seventy percent think it is justified at least sometimes for a person to kill his or her
spouse, if he or she is suffering terrible pain caused by a terminal illness. About half
the public think a oral right to suicide exists if a person has an incurable disease or
is suffering great pain with no hope of recovering (Colasnto 63). And about half of those
with living parents think their mothers and fathers would want medical treatment stopped
if they were suffering a great deal of pain in a terminal disease. Or if they became
totally dependent on a family member, then forty percent of their parents would want
medical treatment stopped if daily activities became a burden (Colasnto 63). Each
viewpoint is supported by many reasons. Those who oppose euthanasia argue that the
medical profession must always be on the side of preserving life (Schofield 24). Another
reason is euthanasia will lead to the devaluation of life (Low 37). Also they think it
will force doctors and family members to judge the value of a patient's life. Critics
also say that acceptance will spread from the terminally ill to the less serious ill, the
handicapped, or the mentally retarded (Russ 117). 
A person has the right to die with dignity. People should be allowed to control their own
deaths. Why should a patient be forced to live if they think their present standard of
life has degenerated to the point of meaningless, when doctors can no longer help, and
perhaps the pain has become unbearable? At this point, they should have the choice to
continue on or to peacefully die, even if they need assistance in doing so (Larue 153). 
The doctor should be allowed to decide if the patient has reached the point of only
getting worse and in considerable pain. In any of these situations a doctor should be at
least an advisor, they are the ones with the medical knowledge, and know the present
condition of the patient and the alternatives. In any humane or humanistic view of what
is good, it is morally wrong to compel hopelessly suffering or irreversible debilitated
patients to stay alive when death is freely elected (Larue 151).
In some cases, like terminal illness, death is often better than dyeing, mainly due to
the way that the person will die. They may have to go thorough a long period of pain and
suffering. Ask yourself which you would choose, early or prolonged death (Larue 153).
Even if you do not think that you would end your life or another's life should personal
views decide that it is not the right thing for another to do. Does any person have the
right to control the choices of others? 
Not all the should everything be done to preserve a life. The advances of technology have
disturbed the natural balance of life and death. No longer does a person die when they
are supposed to; life-support now prevents that. Opponents say doctors should not play
God by killing patients, but do they realize that by prolonging death the medical
profession is doing exactly that? Christian Barnard, at the World Euthanasia Conference,
was quoted as saying, I believe often that death is good medical treatment because it can
achieve what all the medical advances and technology can't achieve today. And that is
stop the suffering of the patient (Battin 21)
A different version of the same argument is, doctors are not always responsible to do
everything they can to save somebody. If a doctor's duty is to ease the pain of his
patients, then why should this exclude the possibility of letting them die? If a patient
has a termianl illness and is in great pain and the patient thinks they would rather die
now than continue living with the pain, the doctor should be allowed to help. What about
a person who is in a vegetative state for a prolonged period of time with no hope of
recovery, should the doctor do everything? Howard Caplan gives an example of this;
I have on my census a man in his early 40s, left an aphasic triplegic by a motorcycle
accident when he was 19. For nearly a quarter of a century, while most of us were
working, raising children, reading, and otherwise going about our lives, he's been
vegetating. His biographical life ended with the crash. He can only articulate - only
make sounds to convey that he's hungry or wet. If he were to become acutely ill, I would
prefer not to try saving him. I'd want to let pneumonia end it for him (Battin 92).
Opponents also claim that euthanasia is against God, therefore it is unethical. Yet
passive euthanasia, or refraining from doing anything to keep the patient alive, has been
in practice since four centuries before Christ; and in the centuries that followed
neither the Christians nor the Jews significantly changed this basic idea. It was killing
they were opposed to. Also in 1958 Pope Pius XII emphasized that we may allow the patient
who is virtually already dead to pass away in peace (Rachels 43). How can anybody say
mercy is against God? But God would want people to die in peace and without pain. If
anything is against God, then it is trying to live longer than God had intended people
to.
The United States was founded because people wanted to be free. Americans have fought for
freedom ever since. If euthanasia is made illegal, it will take away one of the founding
freedoms, the freedom of choice, the freedom for a person to choose a death with dignity
and free of pain and suffering for themselves and their families. As Seneca quoted in
Bolander writes, A punishment to some, to some a gift, and to many a favor (Bolander
24).

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