Physician Assisted Suicide Case Study

1065 Words3 Pages

Physician-assisted suicide is the voluntary termination of one's own life by administration of a lethal substance with the direct or indirect assistance of a physician. It is the practice of providing a competent patient with a prescription for medication for the patient to use with the primary intention of ending his or her own life (“Physician-assisted Suicide”). Physician- assisted suicide is a dilemma that has been debated in the United States. While there are many reasons to consider it right, there are also many reasons to consider it wrong. Currently, states of Oregon, Vermont, and Washington have legalized assisted suicide through the legislature. While individuals have the right to choose whether he or she lives or dies, is physician- assisted suicide right or wrong? This paper supports that physician- assisted suicide is wrong. This paper will feature a case study on physician- assisted suicide. It will argue that physician- assisted suicide is unlawful, unethical, and is dishonoring.
Terri Schiavo Case Study
Terri Schiavo collapsed at her Florida home in full cardiac arrest on February 25, 1990. Schiavo suffered massive brain damage due to lack of oxygen and, after two and a half months in a coma, her diagnosis was changed to a …show more content…

Doctors take a professional oath to provide the best care to his or her patients. Doctors take what is called a Hippocratic Oath, a pledge that guides the ethical practice of medicine. This oath specifies that the primary duty of a physician is to, "first do no harm," it also specifies that a doctor shall "give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked." (“Physician-Assisted Dying Is Not Ethical”) Physician assisted- suicide does not support this assurance. Instead, physician assisted- suicide is in immediate conflict with the pledge by offering essentially no care to the patient, in its place death (“Physician-Assisted Dying Is Not

Open Document