codeerror
Wild Viking
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Suicide help?
"Active death help"(active euthanasia) is the term used for injecting medicaments that lead to the patients death within a few minutes. Usually a mix of sleeping medicine, painkillers and a medicament that lead to heart or lung failure.
Passive euthanasia entails the withholding of common treatments such as antibiotics that woud otherwise prolong the patients life. Another form can be giving morfine to relieve patients from their pain knowing it will lead to their death.
When can, or should a doctor end life-prolonging treatment? Are there situations where a doctor should give patients a lethal injection, or help them commit suicide?
We are born. Most of us live 80 years or more. Aging starts in childhood and really kicks in after we've passed 60. We stop working, take long holidays and drink red wine. As we get older we get increasingly vulnerable and need more and more care and help. Most of us will die as life were, with or without family and friends, with or without pain, with or without faith, with happiness or sorrow. Most of us will die when sickness or age has convinced us that death is a better alternative than life. We get weaker. We stop eating and drinking, and die within days or weeks.
Not long ago my grandmother had a brain stroke. Of the people in my family, she is the only one I've ever been completely honest with, and told every detail in my life. I've been visiting her at the hospital every day since it happened. Although she has lost almost her entire vision, and the control of her left leg, we still talk.
A scary, sudden change has happened to my old grandmother. From being a healthy 89 year old, with a drivers license and a full schedule she is reduced to a mere shadow of herself. She has started to talk about death. She tells me that she doesn't fear death anymore, that she is glad she had this warning.
We talk about showing weakness, we talk about memories, and everytime I leave her we say goodbye as if it were the last time.
The essence of our talks regarding death is that she is hopeful. It is not hope of life, but hope of being seen, that someone cares, that someone loves her, that someone visits her, that someone will remember her when she dies.
The good news: Active euthanasia is forbidden by law in Norway. Instead my grandmother got this message from her doctor: You mean alot for your family and friends, you mean alot to me, we want to help you, we can reduce your pain, and we will get a room for you at a clinic near your home.
What if they offered her a medicine that would end everything?
It isn't possible to hurt a persons dignity more, than to offer to kill them.
Hope this made some sense, if not, I'm glad I wrote it anyway.
Im sorry in advance for any grammar-related mistake I've made in this post.
"Active death help"(active euthanasia) is the term used for injecting medicaments that lead to the patients death within a few minutes. Usually a mix of sleeping medicine, painkillers and a medicament that lead to heart or lung failure.
Passive euthanasia entails the withholding of common treatments such as antibiotics that woud otherwise prolong the patients life. Another form can be giving morfine to relieve patients from their pain knowing it will lead to their death.
When can, or should a doctor end life-prolonging treatment? Are there situations where a doctor should give patients a lethal injection, or help them commit suicide?
We are born. Most of us live 80 years or more. Aging starts in childhood and really kicks in after we've passed 60. We stop working, take long holidays and drink red wine. As we get older we get increasingly vulnerable and need more and more care and help. Most of us will die as life were, with or without family and friends, with or without pain, with or without faith, with happiness or sorrow. Most of us will die when sickness or age has convinced us that death is a better alternative than life. We get weaker. We stop eating and drinking, and die within days or weeks.
Not long ago my grandmother had a brain stroke. Of the people in my family, she is the only one I've ever been completely honest with, and told every detail in my life. I've been visiting her at the hospital every day since it happened. Although she has lost almost her entire vision, and the control of her left leg, we still talk.
A scary, sudden change has happened to my old grandmother. From being a healthy 89 year old, with a drivers license and a full schedule she is reduced to a mere shadow of herself. She has started to talk about death. She tells me that she doesn't fear death anymore, that she is glad she had this warning.
We talk about showing weakness, we talk about memories, and everytime I leave her we say goodbye as if it were the last time.
The essence of our talks regarding death is that she is hopeful. It is not hope of life, but hope of being seen, that someone cares, that someone loves her, that someone visits her, that someone will remember her when she dies.
The good news: Active euthanasia is forbidden by law in Norway. Instead my grandmother got this message from her doctor: You mean alot for your family and friends, you mean alot to me, we want to help you, we can reduce your pain, and we will get a room for you at a clinic near your home.
What if they offered her a medicine that would end everything?
It isn't possible to hurt a persons dignity more, than to offer to kill them.
Hope this made some sense, if not, I'm glad I wrote it anyway.
Im sorry in advance for any grammar-related mistake I've made in this post.
























