Death and Dying: Should Life Support Be Used for a Long Time?

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Death & Dying Term Paper

Life support is a controversial and sensitive topic. When someone is on life support, their brain is completely unconscious. Although their brain is no longer in an active, natural function, a life support machine keeps their organs alive and functioning. Life support is administered during an emergency. It helps to keep a person’s body alive, while their brain is dead. Brain death is an irreversible condition and doctors conduct many tests before determining this diagnosis.

There are two ways in which a person dies: cardiopulmonary death or brain death. Both are formal and legal definitions of death. Cardiopulmonary death is the irreversible loss of function in the heart and lungs. People who have suffered irreparable brain damage (such as head trauma or stroke) are diagnosed with brain death, which is “the irreversible cessation of all brain functions," according to Health System University of Miami.

Many may ask, how can someone be diagnosed as “brain dead”? Well this is very simple. Brainstem is the lowest part of the brain in which is connected to the spinal cord. This part of the brain is responsible for most of the automatic functions of the body that are essential for life: breathing, heartbeat, blood pressure and swallowing, said the National Health System in Britain. The brain stem also makes the exchange of information between the brain and the rest of the body, so it is essential for the functions of awareness, knowledge and movement. There is no possibility of consciousness once the brainstem is permanently damaged and this adds to the inability to breathe or maintain body functions, which is the individual's death, says the NHS.

When someone is brain dead, there is no flow of bl...

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...or someone to latch themselves on the endless possibility that someone could “wake up” after being brain dead for so long. The scientific and medical world have advanced in ways that a normal person could understand. They have specifics testing in which they can determined whether a person is completely brain dead, or simply in a coma in which they have a chance of waking up.

No one should depend on a machine in order to sustain their life. Being brain dead could be a heartbreaking and very emotional subject to discuss among family and friends. It is understandable that some people cannot grasp their loved one’s irreversible death, or understand how their heart is still beating yet their brain in unconscious, but dragging their life and binding their loved ones to be held to a life support machine can seem pretty selfish and careless on their part.

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