Literature DB >> 20711678

The irony of supporting physician-assisted suicide: a personal account.

Margaret Pabst Battin1.   

Abstract

Under other circumstances, I would have written an academic paper rehearsing the arguments for and against legalization of physician-assisted suicide: autonomy and the avoidance of pain and suffering on the pro side, the wrongness of killing, the integrity of the medical profession, and the risk of abuse, the "slippery slope," on the con side. I've always supported the pro side. What this paper is, however, is a highly personal account of the challenges to my thinking about right-to-die issues. In November 2008, my husband suffered a C2/C3 spinal cord injury in a bicycle collision, leaving him ventilator-dependent, almost completely paralyzed, and in the hospital--but fully alert and profoundly self-reflective. What if he wanted to die? This paper draws from two multimedia presentations--file:///Users/margaretbattin/Documents/BROOKE'S%20ACCIDENT/The%20Salt%20Lake%20Tribune%20%7C%20Multimedia:%20Metamorphosis.webarchive and file:///Users/margaretbattin/Documents/BROOKE'S%20ACCIDENT/The%20Salt%20Lake%20Tribune%20%7C%20Multimedia:%20Learning%20to%20live%20again.webarchive--and personal material concerning quality of life (he'd rank at the bottom on the SF-36 and similar scales) and concerning autonomy (his own accounts, verbatim). This is a detailed portrait of a man whose life involves extraordinary suffering but also luminous experience some of the time. It only makes the question harder: What if he wanted to die?

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20711678     DOI: 10.1007/s11019-010-9274-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Health Care Philos        ISSN: 1386-7423


  2 in total

Review 1.  Quality of life after spinal cord injury: a meta-synthesis of qualitative findings.

Authors:  K Whalley Hammell
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2006-11-07       Impact factor: 2.772

2.  Misimagining the unimaginable: the disability paradox and health care decision making.

Authors:  Peter A Ubel; George Loewenstein; Norbert Schwarz; Dylan Smith
Journal:  Health Psychol       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 4.267

  2 in total
  7 in total

1.  Normativity unbound: liminality in palliative care ethics.

Authors:  Hillel Braude
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2012-04

2.  Perspectives on assisted dying.

Authors:  David Badcott; Fuat S Oduncu
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2010-11

3.  [In truth could nothing on earth help? Kleist's suicide from a psychiatric perspective].

Authors:  J E Schlimme; U Gonther
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 1.214

4.  Organised assistance to suicide in England?

Authors:  Christoph Rehmann-Sutter; Lynn Hagger
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2013-06

5.  Palliative sedation, foregoing life-sustaining treatment, and aid-in-dying: what is the difference?

Authors:  Patrick Daly
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2015-06

6.  The ethicist as language czar, or cop: "end of life" v. "ending life".

Authors:  Tom Koch
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2013-12

7.  Anticipation, Accompaniment, and a Good Death in Perinatal Care.

Authors:  Bryanna S Moore; Brian S Carter; Bryan Beaven; Katie House; Joel House
Journal:  Yale J Biol Med       Date:  2019-12-20
  7 in total

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