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Journal Article

Citation

Napiwodzka K. Ethics in Progress 2022; 13(2): 141-146.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022)

DOI

10.14746/eip.2022.2.10

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This is a review of Anthony Stavrianakis' book Leaving. A Narrative of Assisted Suicide (University of California Press, 2019). Medically-assisted suicide still raises many issues and controversies of various types: ethical, legal, organizational and institutional. The situation varies greatly between countries, and depends on health care policies and socially recognised values. However, the overriding question is as follows: under what conditions should this form of death be allowed? Among the arguments that are well known, recognized and now tame, Stavrianakis' research brings new light and perspective. The author goes deeper and searches for the real motives driving people to choose this manner of death. He sees the nuances and recounts the difficulties. In this article, I highlight aspects of Stavrianakis' work that I find relevant and crucial for the issues considered. © 2022, Adam Mickiewicz University, Faculty of Philosophy. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

medical anthropology; physician-assisted suicide; case-based reasoning; Anthony Stavrianakis; assisted voluntary death; narrative approach

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