
@article{ref1,
title="Suicide: bad act or good intervention",
journal="Suicide and life-threatening behavior",
year="1983",
author="Perlmutter, R. and Sider, R. C. and Clements, C. D.",
volume="13",
number="1",
pages="28-41",
abstract="This article develops a different perspective on the ethics of suicide, based on theoretical and clinical grounds. In terms of value theory, applying &quot;good&quot; or &quot;bad&quot; to the suicide act makes no sense. We need to shift our focus from a search for an ethical statement about suicide (e.g., &quot;rational suicide&quot;) to the ethical justification for intervention based on the needs and interests of an affirming therapeutic profession. We choose to intervene because of values we hold about well-functioning, existence, potential for human life; and because as emphatic, social beings, we feel for others and are motivated by that feeling. This justification leads us to suggest a situational case-centered ethics for suicide intervention.",
language="",
issn="0363-0234",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}