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Ian Dowbiggin tells the dramatic story of those reformers who struggled throughout the 20th century to change the nation's attitudes towards mercy-killing and assisted suicide.
Euthanasia --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- History.
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Drawing on a variety of historical, contemporary, anthropological and literary sources, this book considers the present day debates about the sanctity of elderly lives and the question of euthanasia. The book shows that killing the elderly, voluntarily or involuntarily, has been a feature of many societies, from the primitive to the present day.
Age discrimination --- Euthanasia --- Homicide --- Older people --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- Abuse of --- Crimes against
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How we die reveals much about how we live. In this provocative book, Shai Lavi traces the history of euthanasia in the United States to show how changing attitudes toward death reflect new and troubling ways of experiencing pain, hope, and freedom. Lavi begins with the historical meaning of euthanasia as signifying an "easeful death." Over time, he shows, the term came to mean a death blessed by the grace of God, and later, medical hastening of death. Lavi illustrates these changes with compelling accounts of changes at the deathbed. He takes us from early nineteenth-century deathbeds governed by religion through the medicalization of death with the physician presiding over the deathbed, to the legalization of physician-assisted suicide. Unlike previous books, which have focused on law and technique as explanations for the rise of euthanasia, this book asks why law and technique have come to play such a central role in the way we die. What is at stake in the modern way of dying is not human progress, but rather a fundamental change in the way we experience life in the face of death, Lavi argues. In attempting to gain control over death, he maintains, we may unintentionally have ceded control to policy makers and bio-scientific enterprises.
Euthanasia --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- History.
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Professional ethics. Deontology --- Euthanasia. --- Ethics, Medical. --- #GGSB: Bio-ethiek --- #GGSB: Euthanasie --- #GBIB:CBMER --- Medical Ethics --- Medicine --- Professionalism --- Bioethics --- Euthanasia, Involuntary --- Involuntary Euthanasia --- Mercy Killing --- Killing, Mercy --- Killings, Mercy --- Mercy Killings --- Right to Die --- Suicide, Assisted --- Bioethical Issues --- ethics --- Klinische psychologie --- specifieke problemen --- specifieke problemen. --- Euthanasia --- Ethics, Medical --- Bio-ethiek --- Euthanasie
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Die Studie verknüpft zwei für das NS-Regime zentrale Aspekte: den globalen Krieg als Voraussetzung der nationalsozialistischen ";Lebensraum";-Utopie und Gesundheitspolitik, der als Instrument biologistischer Formung des ";Volkskörpers"; zentrale Bedeutung für die Gesellschaftspolitik des ";Dritten Reiches"; zukam. Winfried Süß untersucht den Krieg als intervenierenden Faktor innenpolitischer Entscheidungen und sozialer Verhältnisse. Im Mittelpunkt steht die Frage, wie sich Funktion, Handlungsspielräume und Wirkungen der Gesundheitspolitik seit dem September 1939 veränderten. Dabei werden bislang unverbundene Erkenntnisebenen zusammengeführt: zeit- und medizingeschichtliche Fragestellungen, gesundheitspolitische Prozesse und ihre sozialgeschichtlichen Folgen, zentralstaatliche, regionale und lokale Handlungsarenen. Erstmals wird das Handeln Karl Brandts, einer gesundheitspolitischen Schlüsselfigur der Kriegsjahre, umfassend dargestellt. Hitlers Begleitarzt und Generalkommissar für das Sanitäts- und Gesundheitswesen agierte an der Schnittstelle zwischen den ";heilenden";, ausgrenzenden und vernichtenden Elementen nationalsozialistischer Gesundheitspolitik - ausgestattet mit weitreichenden Kompetenzen sowohl für den Krankenmord als auch die medizinische Versorgung der Wehrmacht und Zivilbevölkerung.
History of Germany and Austria --- anno 1940-1949 --- anno 1930-1939 --- Euthanasia --- Medical ethics --- World War, 1939-1945 --- History. --- History --- Atrocities. --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die
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Neonatal intensive care --- Euthanasia --- Intensive Care, Neonatal. --- Euthanasia. --- Mercy Killing --- Killing, Mercy --- Killings, Mercy --- Mercy Killings --- Right to Die --- Suicide, Assisted --- Bioethical Issues --- Infant, Newborn, Intensive Care --- Neonatal Intensive Care --- Care, Neonatal Intensive --- Infant Care --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Alecson, Deborah Golden,
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Death Talk asks why, when our society has rejected euthanasia for over two thousand years, are we now considering legalizing it? Has euthanasia been promoted by deliberately confusing it with other ethically acceptable acts? What is the relation between pain relief treatments that could shorten life and euthanasia? How do journalistic values and media ethics affect the public's perception of euthanasia? What impact would the legalization of euthanasia have on concepts of human rights, human responsibilities, and human ethics? Can we imagine teaching young physicians how to put their patients to death? There are vast ethical, legal, and social differences between natural death and euthanasia. In Death Talk, Margaret Somerville argues that legalizing euthanasia would cause irreparable harm to society's value of respect for human life, which in secular societies is carried primarily by the institutions of law and medicine. Death has always been a central focus of the discussion that we engage in as individuals and as a society in searching for meaning in life. Moreover, we accommodate the inevitable reality of death into the living of our lives by discussing it, that is, through "death talk." Until the last twenty years this discussion occurred largely as part of the practice of organized religion. Today, in industrialized western societies, the euthanasia debate provides a context for such discussion and is part of the search for a new societal-cultural paradigm. Seeking to balance the "death talk" articulated in the euthanasia debate with "life talk," Somerville identifies the very serious harms for individuals and society that would result from accepting euthanasia. A sense of the unfolding euthanasia debate is captured through the inclusion of Somerville's responses to or commentaries on several other authors' contributions.
Euthanasia. --- Assisted suicide. --- Assisted death (Assisted suicide) --- Assisted dying (Assisted suicide) --- Death, Assisted (Assisted suicide) --- Doctor-assisted suicide --- Dying, Assisted (Assisted suicide) --- Patient-directed death --- Patient-directed dying --- Physician-assisted suicide --- Suicide --- Euthanasia --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die
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Vanuit zijn twintigjarige praktijk met euthanasiebegeleiding stelt Marc Desmet vast dat euthanasie niet zo evident is als soms in de media wordt voorgesteld. Niet voor de zieke die afhankelijk is van een goed luisterende arts en omgeving. Zeker als die zieke minder autonoom is: minderjarig, psychiatrisch, beginnend dementerend...Niet voor naasten die verder leven met hun soms erg verschillende belevingen na de euthanasie.Niet voor artsen die het doen, want zonder hun solidariteit is zelfbeschikking een leeg begrip.De vraag is dus niet alleen: doe je euthanasie of niet? Maar ook: als je het doet, hoe doe je het dan goed? Dat vraagt niet alleen wettelijke zorgvuldigheid, maar ook palliatieve zorg. En er is nog een betrokkene: de maatschappij.
euthanasie --- christelijke ethiek --- Christian moral theology --- Professional ethics. Deontology --- Death [Mercy ] --- Euthanasia --- Euthanasie --- Killing [Mercy ] --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Palliatieve sedatie --- Psychisch lijden --- 605.7 --- palliatieve zorg --- 179.7 --- Terminally ill --- Counseling of --- C5 --- ethiek --- Maatschappelijke organisaties en maatschappelijk leven --- #GBIB: jesuitica --- 241.63*4 --- 241.63*2 --- 241.63*2 Theologische ethiek: medische ethiek: dokter; verpleegster; ziekenhuis --- Theologische ethiek: medische ethiek: dokter; verpleegster; ziekenhuis --- 241.63*4 Theologische ethiek: euthanasie --- Theologische ethiek: euthanasie --- #gsdb5 --- Moraal --- Bio-ethiek --- Jesuïtica
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'Easeful Death' sets out the arguments for and against the legalization of assisted suicide and euthanasia. Exploring the philosophical and legal debates as well as the medical practicalities of this sensitive issue, the authors ultimately conclude that the law should embrace a more compassionate approach to assisted dying.
Euthanasia. --- Assisted suicide. --- Death --- Assisted death (Assisted suicide) --- Assisted dying (Assisted suicide) --- Death, Assisted (Assisted suicide) --- Doctor-assisted suicide --- Dying, Assisted (Assisted suicide) --- Patient-directed death --- Patient-directed dying --- Physician-assisted suicide --- Suicide --- Euthanasia --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- Social aspects. --- Professional ethics. Deontology --- Attitude to Death. --- Ethics, Medical. --- Suicide, Assisted. --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Law and legislation.
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There are vast ethical, legal, and social differences between natural death and euthanasia. In Death Talk Margaret Somerville argues that legalizing euthanasia would cause irreparable harm to society's value of respect for human life, which in secular societies is carried primarily by the institutions of law and medicine.
Euthanasia. --- Assisted suicide. --- Euthanasie. --- Aide au suicide. --- Assisted death (Assisted suicide) --- Assisted dying (Assisted suicide) --- Death, Assisted (Assisted suicide) --- Doctor-assisted suicide --- Dying, Assisted (Assisted suicide) --- Patient-directed death --- Patient-directed dying --- Physician-assisted suicide --- Suicide --- Euthanasia --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- Bioethical Issues. --- Suicide, Assisted.
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