Fr. 188.00

Physician-Assisted Suicide: What are the Issues? - What are the Issues?

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Physician-Assisted Suicide: What are the Issues? offers a detailed discussion of recent supreme court rulings that have had an impact on the contemporary debate in the United States and elsewhere over physician-assisted suicide. Two rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court have altered the contemporary debate on physician-assisted suicide: Washington v. Glucksberg (1997) and Vacco v. Quill (1997). In these cases, the Supreme Court ruled that state laws could prohibit assisted suicide and, therefore, physician-assisted suicide. These rulings mark the apex of over two decades of unprecedented litigation regarding end-of-life care and signal the beginning of a new clinical, ethical, and legal debate over the extent of an individual's rights to control the timing, manner, and means of his/her death.
The debate over suicide and assisting suicide is ancient and contentious and intertwined with questions about the permissibility of voluntary active euthanasia or mercy killing. Responses to these issues can be divided into those who defend physician-assisted suicide and many of these other activities and those who object. But those who object may do so on principled grounds in that they regard these activities as wrong in all cases, or non-principled, in that they believe there are more prudent, less disruptive or more efficient policies. The authors in this book sort out these responses and look at the assumptions underlying them. Several of these authors give startling new interpretations that a culture gap, deeper and wider than that in the abortion debate, exists.

List of contents

The Contemporary Debate Over Physician-Assisted Suicide.- I: On the Permissibility of Physician-Assisted Suicide.- Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia: Another Battle in the Culture Wars.- Refusals/Withdrawals and Physician-Assisted Suicide.- Physician-Assisted Suicide - The Worry About Abuse.- II: Challenging the Case for Physician-Assisted Suicide.- Is There a Slippery Slope From Suicide, to Assisted Suicide, to Consensual Euthanasia?.- Does Physician-Assisted Suicide Promote Liberty and Compassion?.- Job Openings for Moral Philosophers in Oregon: Physician-Assisted Suicide and the Culture of Romantic Rescue.- III: Physician-Assisted Suicide: Views From The Clinic.- Physician-Assisted Suicide - A Clinician's Perspective.- Physician-Assisted Suicide: The Culture of Medicine and the Undertreatment of Pain.- Managed Health Care at the End of Life.- IV: Visions of the Future for Physician-Assisted Suicide.- Physician-Assisted Suicide and the States: Short, Medium, and Long Term.- Safe, Legal, Rare? Physician-Assisted Suicide and Cultural Change in the Future.- Proposal for Legalizing Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in South Africa.- Notes on Contributors.

Summary

Physician-Assisted Suicide: What are the Issues? offers a detailed discussion of recent supreme court rulings that have had an impact on the contemporary debate in the United States and elsewhere over physician-assisted suicide. Two rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court have altered the contemporary debate on physician-assisted suicide: Washington v. Glucksberg (1997) and Vacco v. Quill (1997). In these cases, the Supreme Court ruled that state laws could prohibit assisted suicide and, therefore, physician-assisted suicide. These rulings mark the apex of over two decades of unprecedented litigation regarding end-of-life care and signal the beginning of a new clinical, ethical, and legal debate over the extent of an individual's rights to control the timing, manner, and means of his/her death.
The debate over suicide and assisting suicide is ancient and contentious and intertwined with questions about the permissibility of voluntary active euthanasia or mercy killing. Responses to these issues can be divided into those who defend physician-assisted suicide and many of these other activities and those who object. But those who object may do so on principled grounds in that they regard these activities as wrong in all cases, or non-principled, in that they believe there are more prudent, less disruptive or more efficient policies. The authors in this book sort out these responses and look at the assumptions underlying them. Several of these authors give startling new interpretations that a culture gap, deeper and wider than that in the abortion debate, exists.

Product details

Assisted by A de Ville (Editor), A de Ville (Editor), K. A. de Ville (Editor), K.A. de Ville (Editor), L. M. Kopelman (Editor), L.M. Kopelman (Editor), M Kopelman (Editor), L M Kopelman (Editor), K. A. Ville (Editor), K. A. de Ville (Editor), K.A. de Ville (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 05.12.2012
 
EAN 9781402003653
ISBN 978-1-4020-0365-3
No. of pages 252
Weight 359 g
Illustrations 252 p.
Series Philosophy and Medicine
Philosophy and Medicine
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > Clinical medicine

B, Medicine, Medicine: general issues, Surgery, Philosophy, Bioethics, general surgery, Medical Ethics, Medicine—Philosophy, Philosophy of Medicine, Theory of Medicine/Bioethics, death;health;morality

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