Yes, but ..Many people with mental illness have clarity and insight into "what's wrong" with them and if they feel they can fix it enough to where life still holds value. To force someone to linger on when they already know they can't is just something I've never understood. The same goes for people with terminal illness that are forced to writhe around in pain even if they don't want to.
And not necessarily because of depression- or rather depression and pain that is founded, that life needs and requires love and support and help they do not have at that moment.I don't think I can agree that the person who walks to the edge of the cliff is necessarily in a position to make a good choice, in the moment.
But they are not there for that role. Indeed however US patients that have to self-administer have been known to change their mind.Maybe if he went he went to discuss his right to die with a "professional suicide consultant" in a private setting the gravity of that choice would've been more apparent to him..Maybe if he went he went to discuss his right to die with a "professional suicide consultant" in a private setting the gravity of that choice would've been more apparent to him. Maybe he would've recanted and chose some kind of help to address the damage that was done to him by the rapes he suffered.
Were it their role..I also really feel if that service was available he would've been able to disclose his rape to an anonymous non-judgemental individual. This is what psychologists go to school for. In his case, I genuinely believe he needed help for the torture he endured but he was so ashamed, so defined by it, he felt his only option was to die. "Professional suicide consultants" (that's what I'm calling them) are going to save more lives then approve deaths.
They don't necessarily, but the system in Canada is for cost-cutting. Even comatose they will tell family to get the person out (of the bed), they won't be providing further 'assistance'.I don’t know of a single medical provider that goes into that difficult field in order to slowly kill people for financial gain. Where does this thought come from?
Almost every single experience with family they precisely did. All but one was in a coma; all were cognitively aware, responsive and communicative. All were associated to person place and time. There will be no desire to eat, for the most part. They will tell you that administering IV hydration will 'prolong the process (suffering)'.we don't starve or dehydrate people til they die.. Like not in wards I've b
It's only about $. Most life insurance policies do not pay out for suicide. The population is aging, chronic iullness is widespread. Depression is predicted to be the #1 cause of 'illness' in North America by 2022. Care is costly. And how many people do you know (highly qualified or otherwise), who are going to provide that care when it's barely a livable wage, and their own lifelong injury, and a non-livable pension? (Much like with childcare.. they will pay more here to raise a pig (literally), than to work in child development). Or family members, willing to sacrifice, or able to?I think the solution there would be to improve palliative care, not increasing societal support for assisted suicide of those with mental illness.. Insurance companies would have a financial gain to choose to kill off the disabled or mentally ill than treat them. It’s much cheaper to do a one time dose. It is not factually accurate to view it as either one has to have legal and medical support to die or else one is being forced to live. Suicide can be chosen without legal or medical support. No one is forcing someone with a mental illness to live. Hundreds of thousands manage to kill themselves around the world every year. It doesn’t need to be supported by medical providers and the law for one to end one’s life.
Legal and medical support doesn’t reduce the impact on those left behind. It simply doesn’t work that way.
Wanting medical and legal support for suicide strikes me as wanting something else than just to require others to support death by suicide. I’m not sure what it is, but it just strikes me as there wanting to be something more than just to ends one’s life. Perhaps validation of pain and self-determination? There are other ways to fight for validation and choice than to pour it all into doctor-assisted suicide.
I can not agree there is such a thing as a life that is not worthy to be lived, and I really fear the day the insurance companies and doctors would ever go around thinking that some lives are not worth living.
. Being alone in one's suffering is one, IMHO.There are states that are well worse than death.
I agree
But to change that life.Just because quality of life may suck does not make for a reason to end that life.
Yes, and the effects of exclusion and isolation far harder to change. I wonder if people focus more on understanding that reality? But they can be changed.effects of drugs pass.
. I worked in a ward where many people died. We would give them IV ativan and IV morphine to help the passage. It left them with little pain and calm. One family asked me if I could speed it up, since they had waited to long for their "loved" one to die. I told her I didn't do that. I stayed with one woman while she passed and stroked her head, since her daughter was just sitting there. It was a good passing for her. So no, I didn't let people die puking up their own shit.
nd that often applies, whether or not it's officially "legal" in a given country. There's one thing that's the official version, but often, in practise, there are dedicated professionals making sure to minimise suffering and pain and maximis
Yes it's always been going on (ilegally- consensually and non-consensually), but respectfully not what @dharma girl is referring to, I think. Am reading it as she assisted in care and reducing suffering (legal), not euthenasia (now legal if qualify).
The biggest factor, I would say? Is people can't get close to other's suffering- because they are not comfortable and not familiar, and ironically often- because they are familar with it, within themselves, and absolutely can't face or accept it (Reminds me of my mom working for some of the top Dr's in the world, said many said they went in to it and maintained the supposition 'they would not die'-?? :confused: ? -And that they frequently divorced their initial spouses, as they were too much a reminder of their pre-success, pre-affluent, or struggling days, but that is another topic ) . And making suffering disappear becomes the need, sometimes with fear, sometimes because a person just can't go there themself.
It's only MHO and therefore worth literally nothing, but I think there are several things that can make people want to die than fear the unknown and what they fear will be the unknown. It isn't a distorted mindset necessarily, but it can focus on things that actually can be changed, though the argument is what can't as the reason. I know everyone is individual, but I have never experienced one family member or person I cared for (thousands- I 'was' the person there, nearly every day, including their last) that died un-peaacefully (except for one family member where the choice was taken away, so they were simply (very) shortly 'dead'.) But, they were, surrounded by love: of one, or 2 or 6. Ill, dying, and at the moment of their death. They went on to live much longer than their prognoses (another 'problem': my 'palliative people were threatened off the system. leaving only to pay privately- atrocious , impossible cost for most- because 'they lived' too long, aka you're 'supposed' to be dead in 6 months and it's going on 2 years.. Same reason one cannot get a spot in hospice care- unless for the most part you have private pull).
Could the question really be, not should it be allowed (yes?), but should we allow ourselves and other humans to suffer so much death is preferable, and direct the argument to the right to live or die? Because (IMHO giving the care), it's never the physical- unbearable as it can even be- that becomes the deciding factor for that person.
Which doesn't infer it's someone's fault to choose it- only that their pain management is wholly insufficient, including in the case of ptsd. We will all die. We can all die in front of a train, or within a relatively short time without food, and especially fluids. But, is there anything to live for? Is there any one, or thing, or can we ourselves, stand side by side in what will be inevitable for all of us, regardless?
The same reason, I think, we will always remember how someone made us feel, not necessarily their words, or even most of their actions.
I hear of a society that says, ~ you are different, you are suffering, you are inconvenient, you actually- don't have rights- the right to want to live. Do (I) say, talk to me; tell me your fears, tell and show me who you are; I will carry you (now) when you are weak, and without judgment; we will get through this (even if the getting through is the Biggest Unknown of all). I will not abandon you in whatever you are facing, I will face it alongside you.
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