• Tidak ada hasil yang ditemukan

Physician Assisted Suicide and The Art of Care

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2017

Membagikan "Physician Assisted Suicide and The Art of Care"

Copied!
1
0
0

Teks penuh

(1)

Title:

Physician Assisted Suicide and The Art of Care Word Count:

860 Summary:

In an age of managed care, rationing of care, and technological care, there is The Art of Care. We live in a society that has been given various choices to ˆself-determine˜ one´s destiny in dying as one has been able to ˆself-determine˜ one´s destiny in life itself.

Keywords:

death, dying, resources, soul, spirit, and, physician, assisted, suicide, sam, oliver

Article Body:

In an age of managed care, rationing of care, and technological care, there is The Art of Care. We live in a society that has been given various choices to ˆself-determine˜ one´s destiny in dying as one has been able to ˆself-determine˜ one´s destiny in life itself. We have medicines and technological capabilities, and areas of the country allowing us to hasten or postpone one´s dying. The purpose of this position paper is to outline the legal, ethical, religious, and philosophical ramifications involved in Physician Assisted Suicide (PAS) and how affects of such decisions effect those connected to this issue. The pros for PAS are:

· People should have the right to die with dignity

· People should have the right to die with their senses intact · People should have the right to die free of pain

· People should have the right to take charge of futile care The cons for PAS are:

· Slippery-slope effect, or acceptable and unacceptable euthanasia · No policy is able to effectively govern the scope of the right to die · True wishes are hard to discern due to communication challenges

· Playing God

I am simply giving an overview, and not, a detailed analysis on this issue. My intent is to surface the issues in PAS and move toward a philosophy of care that can minimize people´s fear of death by the utilization of a type of care = The Art of Care. The Art of Care will help people gain inner strength that can enable him or her to cope with the external losses happening to their body. At the end of this paper, I hope to outline practical ways people can help terminal patients cope with a dying body from a place inside them that remains steadfast ˘ their soul.

It was Karl Barth who said that ˆit is for God and God alone to make an end to human life˜ and that God gives life to us ˆas an inalienable loan.˜ It is my belief that we are given meaning and hope in all life situations. This instinct to survive and find value in all of our existence leads me to trust that there is much to learn in all phases of our life. Our ability to trust our Creator´s divine guidance and plan to make us more soul than body at the end of life is just as important as other aspects of living as well. We may do well to trust more and control less. It appears that maturity teaches us all to let go and follow a path inside us that does not always make sense to us externally. As we do, we begin to follow insight. To see from within what cannot be seen from without is our soul´s longing to be known and to surface in our lives. In On Liberty, John Stuart Mill cautions, ˆA person should be free to do as he likes in his own concerns, but ought NOT to be free to do as he likes in acting for another, under the pretext that the affairs of the other are his own affairs. Autonomy is so important to us that science, as well as religious communities strive to honor and respect it. For within autonomy is the ability for one to discern for him or herself one´s needs, values, and destiny. This is a movement into the art of care (science and religion) can work together in forging a healing response on the level of soul when physical cure is no longer possible.

On the other side of this issue, it is evident that the Oregon ´s Death with Dignity Act has had its impact on America . Some people want this service available even if it is not chosen by a great number of people. The Oregon ´s Death with Dignity Act has been used very sparingly and a slippery slope does not appear to be in the present forefront. ˆIn 2001, twenty-one Oregonians chose to end their lives by ingesting a lethal dose of medication prescribed by a physician, accounting for 0.33% of the 6,365 Oregon deaths from similar diseases. The number of Oregonians opting for physician-assisted suicide has remained fairly stable, ranging from sixteen in both 1998, the first year the law was in effect, to twenty-seven in both 1999 and 2000. Clearly, there is no landslide in the making.˜ It seems then, that people still want to have some sort of control in their dying and autonomy remains prevalent throughout the issue with PAS. This strong need to determine one´s path in the face of suffering offers us hope, faith, and love in a sense of the self not easily defined without losing the grandeur of a trust within oneself to be led by the same power that brought our lives into being. It is here that we turn to the art of care to help us when curative care no longer has any answers. Here, we begin where we end, in that we trust in the very wisdom that has created us.

Samuel Oliver, author of, "What the Dying Teach Us: Lessons on Living" For more on this author; http://www.soulandspirit.org

This is a demo version of txt2pdf v.10.1

Referensi

Dokumen terkait

Adelaide has been predominantly a European city for much of its history since first settlement in 1836 but the present profile of the Islamic collection at the

However, in 2019 there has been a 20-case increase in compliance, namely as many as 20 cases out of 17 end itself bonded area entrepreneurs who did not comply or

Visum et Repertum is a medical expert information that has been contained in a written report .20 So that there is no necessity for the expert to come in front of the hearing as long as

This issue will be explored with reference to arms-related GBV in Papua New Guinea and its autonomous region Bougainville, which Human Rights Watch has termed “one of the most dangerous

In Chapter 2, entitled “Charity,” Brittan claims that the relationship between charity and social class “has been of primary importance to the South African Nobel Laureate, J.M..

Rating of Views of Chinese Art and Return of the Buddha Visit In the study of Return of the Buddha, we found that repeat visitors i.e., those who had been to the Freer Gallery or

Because of the inevitability of encountering the dying process and death in a nursing student’s clinical preparation [6], this study explored the level of fear of dying and death among

No article in the original pamphlet has been neglected, not even that grotesque and shameless one that "Native education should not be financed at the expense of white." Since what is