Imagine a person visiting a doctor who realizes that he or she is suffering from a debilitating disease such as inoperable or progressive cancer, AIDS, or Lou Gehrig or multiple sclerosis. Death is an inevitable fact in life, but in the case of cancer, AIDS and other deadly diseases it may be closer than it is hoping and more painful. Recent developments in Belgium are the legalization of the euthanasia of children with terminal illness, and from Chantal Sebire, a French citizen suffering from intestinal mucosal blastoma (rare refractory nasal cancer that gradually damages her) Included the report and eventually will kill her)
"Chantal Sebire knows that people are forced to make painful decisions, but that pain is what she knows very well," Bruce Kramli entitled "Make a euthanasia" . "52-year-old Dijon's teacher is suffering from a rare illness of deforming the tumor of the face, this will also hurt her brain until eventually kill her. The law of euthanasia As it was rejected, Sebire is currently waiting for the judge to decide whether the doctor can end painful life with the current law.
Com reported a woman who asked the doctor to help with suicide. A 52 year old Chental Sebire whose face is swollen and distorted with a rare tumor in the paranasal sinuses won many media coverage and sympathizes with her to show the legal precedent of the patient trying to kill the pain There. The court ruled Monday that Sebire can not let the doctor help her death. Because it violates medical ethics and legal regulations and helps suicide become a crime.
Whether euthanasia and suicide assistance should be legalized is one of the most serious legal and ethical issues of discussion. Advocates that legitimize suicide assistance and euthanasia often defend their case by mixing the two arguments. One is based on social policy and the other is related to personal freedom, dignity, pain, and suffering. In my opinion, some of these claims are flawed and insufficient to justify the legitimization of suicide assistance and euthanasia. Legalization can have serious consequences for those who should be supported and protected, especially because of the vulnerability.
Even under the influence of these protest groups, it is a very difficult decision that the debate on euthanasia and whether it should be legalized or not is increasingly intense. Although euthanasia has advantages in several respects, it should not be legalized due to the fact that it is believed to be morally unacceptable according to Canadian policies, which it can be applied to various people including the elderly It will have a negative effect. This article outlines various types of euthanasia, history of euthanasia, Canadian policy on euthanasia, changes in population, arguments about why it should not be legalized, and the impact of legalization on various people .