This book introduces ten episodes on actual medical dramas. These stories are full of very painful decisions that patients and their families face. Contrary to the cases of timber and rigidity found in textbook scenarios representing literature in medical ethics, individuals involved in these critical moments of ethical decision are reality. The characters and settings they encounter are rich and vivid. These compelling stories bring ethical problems including traumatic brain injury to parents who donated their daughter's organs; a young woman finally dismisses her decision
Discussions on euthanasia are often involved in a series of emotional charges such as accusing the "most vulnerable" human beings "surrounded by practitioners who have euthanized them". The basic problem of euthanasia or suicide assistance, if it actually exists, is whether the person is sick at the end and feels themselves due to intolerable pain and loss. Life is neither dignity nor incompetence of a good life. It is not people suffering from depression, but repeatedly seeks suicide and spiritual health repeatedly directly and positively for help. Whether a person is free to seek help from a doctor for death. The patient can ask the doctor about any questions they want. Whether a particular doctor should take the initiative to kill the patient. Instead, their depression is cherished
Euthanasia is intentional killing of dependents for their own interests. There are several types of euthanasia; active and passive euthanasia, spontaneous and involuntary euthanasia, indirect euthanasia and assisted suicide ("euthanasia form"). The moral problem of euthanasia is whether the individual has the right to decide how and when to die. Because euthanasia is illegal in all countries except seven countries, it seems that most people adopt a moral opinion on this subject and think that it is morally wrong.
In this article we will explore the relationship between moral and law. Then explain the emotional theme by observing whether spontaneous euthanasia should be legalized in the UK. The arguments for and against the euthanasia are carried out in the context of various moral theories fusing the subjects. From an ethical point of view, euthanasia raises a number of important questions, including the right to life, the right to freedom, avoidance of unnecessary suffering, the proper allocation of medical resources, and the rights and obligations of the physician. Other relevant considerations include a criterion for improving palliative care and a discussion for "landslides". The central rationale for supporting and opposing euthanasia is being evaluated in the context of contemporary mainstream moral theory.