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Journal Article

Citation

George R, Proffitt A. Medicine (Abingdon) 2020; 48(10): 667-670.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Medicine Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.mpmed.2020.07.012

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Intentionally terminating life (ITL) is usually assumed to require a doctor to perform it. However, it does not. We do not discuss this here. If ITL becomes a medical responsibility, the profession changes to incorporate a new duty to end some people's lives. This is the most significant moral question in medicine. This article intends to clarify several ethical confusions that can derail one's personal analysis. You may favour legalization of ITL without compunction, you may oppose it in any form, or you may favour ITL but see it only as safe if implemented separate from medicine. Our intention is that you engage with the moral reasoning and not the emotional polemic of this postmodern debate. © 2020


Language: en

Keywords

human; suicide; assisted suicide; medical ethics; occupation; review; euthanasia; physician; human experiment; human dignity; medical assistant; physician-assisted suicide; Assisted dying; dying with dignity; medical aid in dying; reasoning; physician-administered euthanasia

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