Perspectives: Allow Dying People To End Their Lives With Aid Of Doctor; AMA Should Still Oppose Assisted Suicide
Opinion writers focus on physician-assisted suicides.
It was an emotional moment for my friend and for me. As we sat in the living room of her home in California, she told me that the breast cancer that had been responding to treatment for several years had spread throughout her body. 鈥淚t鈥檚 everywhere now,鈥 she said, adding without a trace of self-pity: 鈥淚 have less than six months to live. I鈥檓 so grateful that I won鈥檛 have to spend my last days or weeks in extreme agony.鈥 (Diane Rehm, 6/7)
The American Medical Association聽House of Delegates in Chicago will soon engage in a critical debate over the report of the AMA鈥檚 Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs concerning the practice of assisted suicide. For almost聽30 years, pro-assisted suicide organizations have been lobbying for legalized assisted suicide throughout the USA.聽This practice involves a physician prescribing a non-FDA approved lethal overdose of drugs to a person believed to have a terminal illness.聽In 2016, the AMA charged the CEJA with reevaluating the AMA鈥檚 ethical position, issued聽in 1994, in opposition to the legalization and practice of assisted suicide. The current AMA position states that assisted suicide 鈥渋s fundamentally incompatible with the physician鈥檚 role as healer, would be difficult or impossible to control, and would pose serious societal risks.鈥 (Joseph E. Marine, 6/8)