Healthcare in Canada
Introduction
It feels painful to be helpless and unable to do anything by yourself. Some people feel like dying rather than suffering from certain severe diseases that do not have a cure yet they feel like they are not getting any better and still they are not in their last month of death. In that connection, a section of individuals felt it is better to legalize euthanasia so that citizens cannot suffer for long with that much pain. Euthanasia is killing a patient who is suffering from a painful or incurable disease or has been in a coma for a very long time without any improvement. In some countries, this practice was legalized, but in other nations, it is still illegal. In the 1990s, Sue Rodriguez introduced the right to die debate in Canada (Bryant, Leaver, & Dunn, 2009). The plea was denied by the court until Dr. Donald Low, who was a microbiologist from Toronto made a plea for the mercy killing in a video he had recorded some time before he died. The article emphasizes on the Canadian Supreme Court
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Since euthanasia was not yet legalized in Canada, his plea to be assisted in dying was not possible. Most doctors also did not support the assisted dying plea. Dr. Low claimed he wishes the doctors who did not support the dying with dignity plea as he called it knew how it feels to be in pain. He wished they could be him for just 24 hours then they will understand how it feels and they would fully support him in the assisted dying plea. Low said that he feel it will take time for the people to grow up and legalize mercy killing. He felt so bad that he could not have control over his life and just end it all because he was already tired of suffering (Hospitalnews.com, 2015). Low recorded a video few days before his death so that the public could view it and understand why he wanted that mercy killing to be legalized (Donald et al.,