In the past few years suicide rates are rising rapidly. In 2007, suicide was the tenth most common cause of death in the United States, more than 34,598 people died. This means that 11.3 per 100,000 people commit suicide. Some people are talking about legalization of suicide by doctors recently. It is a terrible idea to legalize a doctor to help suicide. One of the reasons I said this is that they might just react at that moment but I really do not believe this is the answer.
In today's society, it is a common argument that doctors support legalization of suicide. In 1997, the Supreme Court acknowledged that there was no federal constitutional right, the doctor helped commit suicide (Harned 1), defined suicide as a lethal doctor's aid (Pearson 1), and if necessary to the state legislature I approved legalization. Only legalized doctors in Oregon State and Washington State supported suicide. People who are seeking help for suicide tend to suffer tilted judgments in many cases
Aided Suicide In 1997, Oregon became the only state permitted by legal doctors to assist suicide (PAS). Doctors have supported suicide in Oregon for four years, but there are still many controversies. PAS refers to a doctor who gives patients medication and causes them to die. Patients must meet certain requirements to claim fatal medicine prescriptions. - Supporting suicide to sanction the lives of innocent people is the main purpose of breaching orderly social law. Laws or court rulings that allow suicide will reduce the lives of vulnerable patients and reach out to those who feel they are better dead. Such policies will erode medical professionals, and the moral standards of medical professionals demand that doctors be killed and never killed.
Assisted suicide is defined as a suicide done with the help of another person (sometimes a doctor). It also applies outside medical conditions, such as when providing a weapon or other means to help a suicide person achieve his death. "Assistant suicide" has been used to explain the death of medical assistance in the United States. This is suitable for adults with psychiatric disorders self-administering drugs to shorten their death process. This term is often used interchangeably with doctor suicide (PAS), "doctor's death", "doctor's death", "doctor's death" and "death remedy" in the same sense.