Arthur Arutyunyan
Professor Patrick Egan
English 101
13 September 2014
Euthanasia
As humans, we can only do so much to make sure our lives are long and fulfilling, given that death is our ineluctable fate. With that being said, should it be our choice to take course of action instead of fate itself? It is easy to believe that anyone has the ability to always fight any illness no matter what the chances of survival are, but picture this: a patient in a hospital, facing an immedicable illness that is causing intolerable pain and struggling. Would they want this to continue, knowing there is no chance of survival or would he or she want the misery to just end before it causes any more discomfort? This brings us to a practice called euthanasia.
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It is said for all of us to have an inherent right to life, yet when it comes to death one has no say. People should be free to determine their fates by their own autonomous choices, especially in connection with private matters, such as health, that primarily involves one’s own welfare” (Preston, Gunderson, and Mayo 54). The amount of pain and struggle someone is going through cannot be understood by anyone but that person themselves. Pain can always be explained by words but words will never be able to make anyone fully understand someone’s own physical and mental state. That being said, no one should have the right to decide the future of a patient suffering from unbearable pain besides the patient himself. “Knowing our rights to refuse treatment, as well as legal ways to bring about death if pain or distress cannot be alleviated, will spare us the frightening helplessness that can rob our last days of meaning and connection with others” (Wanzer, and Glenmullen 1). Many dispute that a patient with a severe illness is highly medicated, therefore it isn’t their mind speaking, but rather the …show more content…
For a long time now, America’s economy has been plagues by overwhelming costs of health care. There are fatally ill, crippled, or disabled people who choose to kill themselves and to some degree it is beneficial to their families because it ends suffering and pointless costs to keep the patient alive (McCuen 29). Some may argue that a price tag cannot be put on a loved ones life, however, if the loved ones of a patient really do love him or her they have to realize that medication is just causing his or her suffering to lengthen. The cost of euthanasia is beyond comparison with the amount of hospital bills and medical expenses that come along with a patient who is in need of critical care. Moreover, if one wants their life of insufferable pain to end, then those resources should be used towards those with a desire and possibility to fully recuperate and live normally. By legalizing euthanasia we can save the billions wasted on medical bills and instead, put that money into greater