Statements in which the resource exists as a subject.
PredicateObject
rdf:type
lifeskim:mentions
pubmed:issue
3
pubmed:dateCreated
1992-10-28
pubmed:abstractText
In several US states, the legalisation of euthanasia has become a question for voters to decide in public referenda. This democratic approach in politics is consistent with notions of personal autonomy in medicine, but the right of choice does not mean all choices are morally equal. A presumption against the taking of human life is embedded in the formative moral traditions of society; human life does not have absolute value, but we do and should impose a strict burden of justification for exceptions to the presumption, as exemplified by the moral criteria invoked to justify self-defence, capital punishment, or just war. These criteria can illuminate whether another exception should be carved out for doctor-assisted suicide or active euthanasia. It does not seem, in the United States at any rate, that all possible alternatives to affirm the control and dignity of the dying patient and to relieve pain and suffering, short of taking life, have been exhausted. Moreover, the procedural safeguards built into many proposals for legalised euthanasia would likely be undone by the sorry state of the US health care system, with its lack of universal access to care, chronic cost-containment ills, a litigious climate, and socioeconomic barriers to care. There remains, however, common ground in the quest for humane care of the dying.
pubmed:commentsCorrections
pubmed:keyword
pubmed:language
eng
pubmed:journal
pubmed:citationSubset
E
pubmed:status
MEDLINE
pubmed:month
Sep
pubmed:issn
0306-6800
pubmed:author
pubmed:issnType
Print
pubmed:volume
18
pubmed:owner
NLM
pubmed:authorsComplete
Y
pubmed:pagination
128-34
pubmed:dateRevised
2010-9-7
pubmed:meshHeading
pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Advance Directives, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Attitude to Death, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Ethical Theory, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Ethics, Medical, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Euthanasia, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Euthanasia, Active, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Euthanasia, Active, Voluntary, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Hippocratic Oath, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Humans, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Morals, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Personal Autonomy, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Physician-Patient Relations, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Social Support, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Social Values, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Stress, Psychological, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Suicide, Assisted, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-United States, pubmed-meshheading:1404279-Value of Life
pubmed:year
1992
pubmed:articleTitle
'Aid-in-dying' and the taking of human life.
pubmed:affiliation
Department of Religious Studies, Oregon State University, Corvallis.
pubmed:publicationType
Journal Article