Should physicians be allowed to opt-out of assisting with suicide if it is legal and a person requests it?
Assisting Suicide
Part 1: Ethical Question
Should physicians be allowed to opt-out of assisting with suicide if it is legal and a person
requests it?
Part 2: Introduction
There are countries in the glob that have allowed euthanasia in which is a way physicians
are involved in termination of life of a patient would wish to die. This has been a controversial
issue in many states in which some states have allowed physicians to assist opting out when a
person requests it (Thomson, 2019). In most cases, this kind of situation is evident when the
patient is under an extreme condition where the pain is more than a human can handle; therefore
patients decide the life to be terminated to avoid suffering (Lee et al, 2016). Suffering can only
be estimated by humans in this situation, the patient can be the only one who testifies its
magnitude.
However, this has been controversial since it is against some religious beliefs that do not
believe in life termination by humans, as well as considering the patient might not be making the
right decision due to his or her condition (Thomson, 2019). There have been several cases in
which physicians are sued after terminating the life of a patient; afterwards the family members
reclaim that was wrong since the patient would recover. In some cases, for example, Brittany was
involved in such a case where she had to move to Oregon to be allowed to terminate her life. In
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brief, the argument from autonomy maintains that just as everyone has the right to determine for
themselves how to live their lives, they should have the right to determine for themselves the
timing and manner of their death (Thames, 2018).
Part 3: Position Statement
It is among the right of a patient to be assisted when the need comes, and therefore a
physician should not opt-out when it comes to initiating suicide when a patient wishes to when
the law has allowed the act.
Part 4: Reasons in Support of Your Position
According to my statement position, there are various reasons in which a patient should
be allowed to commit suicide mores when the law gives in a go-ahead. It is upon personal rights
to either life or death and there are tangible reasons why one should die. Initially, one fills
suicide death forms when the individual is in a critical condition as fur as health status is
concerned. The law has defined that humans have the right to die, and therefore, this right should
be executed in the right way (Lee et al, 2016). When a physician opts out to help a patient in
suicide after following the necessary procedure, it would be a denial of personal rights. In most
cases, such situations turn out to the only option that is remaining.
Apart from having the right to die, other reasons would force one to have legal suicide.
Initially, this process tends not to harm others in that there no conflicts that exist, it is also part of
respecting selfhood and human dignity in that the aspect of being able to determine what one
needs is part of human dignity that should be upheld (Thomson, 2019). This means that opting-
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out in such a situation results in more suffering and therefore physicians ought not to opt-out
more so when they are covered by the law.
Part 5: Opposing Position Statement
Taking the fact that it is unethical being involved in life termination acts despite the law
standing in between to protect an individual, it is not morally upright in terminating a human life
for, it is not the role of humans to end life instead, a role of subring being.
Part 6: Reasons in Support of the Opposing Position
In every act of life, there are pros and cons in which both sides should be taken into
consideration. When it comes to life termination, this act brings life to a complete end in that
there is no other chance of living. (Fischer et al, 2018) A physician opting out may give a patent
a chance to survive despite the condition in that pain can cease making that patient have a change
of mind in that this will be possible if the physician had decided to opt-out.
It is also important to consider religious stands and ethics that ought to be used in such
situations in which it unethical to allow humans to terminate their life regardless of the condition
(Thomson, 2019). It is also part of devaluing human life such that one takes part in terminating a
life that shows less value of human need to live.
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References
Fischer, S., Huber, C. A., Imhof, L., Imhof, R. M., Furter, M., Ziegler, S. J., & Bosshard, G.
(2018). Suicide assisted by two Swiss right-to-die organizations. Journal of medical
ethics, 34(11), 810-814.
Lee, M. A., Nelson, H. D., Tilden, V. P., Ganzini, L., Schmidt, T. A., & Tolle, S. W. (2016).
Legalizing assisted suicide—views of physicians in Oregon. New England Journal of
Medicine, 334(5), 310-315.
Thames, B. (2018). How should one live? An introduction to ethics and moral reasoning (3rd
ed.). Retrieved from https://content.ashford.edu
Thomson, J. J. (2019). Physician-assisted suicide: Two moral arguments. Ethics, 109(3), 497-
518.