Roshona Perry
English 0890
Professor McNally
15 December 2014
Assisted Suicide
Assisted suicide for the terminally ill has been a very big issue in today’s society. Some people may think that terminally ill patients should not have the right to ask their doctor to assist them in dying no matter what their condition is. As for other people may think that a patient should be able to ask their doctor to assist them in dying because they should be allowed to choose when and how they want to die. Those who don’t believe that assisted suicide should be legal because they believe that is goes against religious belief and medical ethics. They also believe that there is a possibility of a miracle or maybe the doctor had the wrong diagnosis. I feel
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Jack Kevorkian was a pathologist who helped people suffering from medical conditions in ending their lives. After a 1999 conviction Kevorkian spent eight years in prison because of his choice to help people who were terminally ill end their lives (Kevorkian). Kevorkian was fascinated with the thought of death he was so fascinated that he would photograph the patient’s eyes in an attempt to pinpoint the exact moment of death. He called his method terminal human experimentation, he claimed that this would be the best thing for people who were terminally ill because it would be painless and they wouldn’t have to suffer the pain anymore. For his strange experiment Jack Kevorkian was given the nickname Dr. Death. When he left the university of Michigan Medical Center and continued at the Pontiac General hospital instead. Medical technologist Neal Nicol helped Jack stimulate the same experiment as the Russian medical team who was transfusing blood from corpses into living patients. The experiments were very successful and he believed that his procedure …show more content…
Brittany is a 29 year old women who just over a year ago got married to her loving husband Dan. On New Year’s Day after months of Brittany having really bad headaches she was diagnosed with brain cancer. Nine days after her diagnoses with brain cancer she had a partial craniotomy and a partial resection of her temporal lobe. Both surgeries were an effort to stop the tumor in her brain from growing. In April the tumor came back, but it was more aggressive than before. The doctors gave her a prognosis of six months to live. Because the tumor is so big the doctors had told her that she has to have full brain radiation. After reading the side effects of what radiation could do to her Brittany and her family reached a heartbreaking decision to not have radiation done. Brittany did consider Hospice care but even with palliative medication she could develop morphine resistant pain, personality changes verbal, cognitive and motor loss of any kid. She did not want her family to have to suffer the nightmare of watching her suffer in this pain, so she started researching death with dignity. Death with dignity was, “an end of life option for mentally competent, terminally ill patients with a prognosis of six months or less to live. It would enable her to use the medical practice of aid and dying, she could request and receive a prescription from a physician that she could self-ingest to end her dying process if it becomes