The Right to Die
Over at her place, Fatmammycat posted on whether assisted suicide should be allowed under law. I was going to comment, but decided to write my own post on the issue. I've been interested in this debate for years, and I feel this is one of the personal liberty issues that will be debated inside and out over the coming years. In 1997, one of my closest friends died from cystic fibrosis. In many cases, CF is a death sentence, though less so today than when my friend was born; however, the outlook is still grim. My friend died suddenly at 27, and as much as it hurt at the time, I am so glad that his fabulous brain and brilliant personality didn’t decline slowly - this is not the case, of course, for everyone with a fatal illness.
I cannot see any reason for death to be illegal. It's your life. As long as you are a sane, rational person, do with it what you will. Obviously, we need to understand and help those who are suicidal, as this is a psychological and psychiatric issue. As a result, most countries have decriminalized suicide (anyhow the criminalization of suicide stems from religion more than criminal law). Although there is plenty of room for improvement, attitudes to mental illness and depression have changed. Most people have a greater understanding of this as a medical issue, and many have been affected by, or know someone, who has been affected by depression. Hopefully our greater awareness as a society will help prevent suicides related to mental illness. Dervala* has talked eloquently about both depression,** the available medicines to treat this, and suicide prevention over at her blog.
The desire to commit suicide, not because you have a mental illness, but because you have a terminal physical one, makes a lot of common sense. What sane person would want to die slowly and painfully? We have a close family friend who has had MS for over three decades. The last decade has been awful. Her body has absoluely shut down. She has no way of communicating and has been under hospice care for at least 10 years. That has to be the seventh ring of hell. What is served by prolonging her life? My guess is her death, when it comes, will be a great relief to all who love her. I say this with no knowledge of her family’s position on this, but from a personal perspective. I would never want to watch a loved one suffer like this, nor suffer it myself.
Now, obviously there has to be safeguards to avoid real criminal activity. There will always be someone willing to knock off mammy to get their greedy little hands on the family fortune. But that is murder and we already have laws against that. Everyone knows they will get old and die, and these days, most people get advance warning about death due to illness. The use of legal documents like living wills and family trusts enable us to detail what treatment we would like at every stage of the way. My wife and I recently created a family trust (added benefit of decreasing the tax burden on your loved ones should you die!), wherein we detailed what becomes of our property, who cares for our kids, and most importantly, what happens should we end up terminally ill and unable to make decisions for ourselves, or become brain dead and on life support. Shane, Maya, and Cian will find it difficult should they turn out to be patricidal or matricidal...
The rub is allowing medical staff to assist you. They administer potentially lethal levels of drugs to relieve pain for those on deaths door anyhow. My guess is most are around suffering so much that they would probably not have objections in terminal cases. However this is illegal today, no matter how awful the alternative means of death is, and make no mistake, many illness cause much greater suffering to the person involved and to their family and friends than helping them on their way. Assisted suicide would be a much kinder and gentler option.
The most difficult case is that of the elderly. How about wanting to commit suicide just because you are heading into senescence, and do not want to suffer? This is an issue that will become more prominent as people live longer. It is likely our generation may live in their nineties and hundreds. Maybe even older. Fifty years ago, people died younger and more suddenly. Not many people drop dead of a heart attack these days. The cost of life insurance in the
I watched a segment on 60 minutes (I think it was 60 minutes), some time back where a woman who had a terminal illness decided while she was healthy that she wanted to end her life. She threw a party, and then self-administered an overdose, and seemed to die very peacefully with all her friends and family in attendance. Of course her friends and family grieved but it was a celebration of her life and much of the grueling awfulness of death through illness was excised.
Tradition and ceremony are an integral part of our humanity. Could choosing the time and place of our death, and creating ceremony around that be the next evolution of our society?
* With no offense meant to the many excellent nominees at The Irish Blog Awards, it's not a good sign that Dervala got only one nomination for what is patently the one of the best personal blogs out there – and not just by an Irish person, but by anyone.
** Dooce, who suffered from post partum depression, recently linked to this post
Labels: Assisted Suicide, Death Rights
2 Comments:
I followed you over from Fat Mammy Cat's blog.
I agree with what you've said in your blog. We need safeguards and we need ease for the patient.
Y'know those self-administer-morphine-machine things (no, thank God) - patients are given them sometimes after operations. They click a button and get a morphine dose, to save waiting for a nurse and the pain becoming intolerable. There's a safety thing on them, so that only x amount can be given in 24 hours. How about increasing that for patients in severe pain, and allowing fatal doses in extreme, agreed cases? I don't know, but no-one should have to have a dreadful death when it's chemically avoidable.
Thanks and welcome Mairead,
I think many people are agreed on allowing terminally people to pick the time and place of their death. My thoughts are that there would need to be advice and counsellings. I think the one thing that came through from the Terry Schiavo case over here in the US is that we should all make sure we have living wills etc in the case that we are suddenly and severely incapacitated.
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home