Ending the Unbearable Suffering
By: Venidikt • Essay • 381 Words • January 11, 2010 • 833 Views
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"He could no longer speak, eat, open his eyes or even move. There was no hope that he would ever awake from his coma. I sat with his parents after they made the hardest decision of their lives. Tears of pain, loss, and relief streamed down all of our faces as the doctor removed the IV from his arm and the mask from his face. His parents ultimately decided that taking him off life support was the most humane and decent thing they could do for their child." Society today often believes, and thinks, that euthanasia and assisted suicide are the same. However, Euthanasia is when one person does something that directly kills another and it is the best solution for ending a suffering patient's life. On the other hand, in assisted suicide, a non-suicidal person knowingly provides the means in a certain way to help a suicidal person kill him or herself. "Good death" the meaning of the Greek word euthanasia, assists suffering patients and their parents by carrying on their order of putting a painful life to an end.
One of many humane and positive deeds which doctors accomplish is, performing the act of bringing death to patients with incurable and painful diseases. In some cases the patients make the choice of telling the doctors to put their life to an end, while in others the parents make this choice. Euthanasia relieves a patient who is fatally ill and has a loss of dignity and capability to maintain his or her normal way of life. Therefore, euthanasia