Sedation Before Ventilator Withdrawal: Can It Be Justified by Double Effect and Called "Allowing a Patient to Die"?
Author(s)
Devettere, Raymond J.Keywords
Active EuthanasiaAllowing to Die
Assisted Suicide
Autonomy
Beneficence
Death
Decision Making
Double Effect
Drugs
Ethical Analysis
Ethicists
Ethics
Euthanasia
Killing
Moral Policy
Pain
Patients
Physicians
Right to Die
Roman Catholic Ethics
Sedatives
Suffering
Suicide
Surgery
Terminal Care
Theology
Treatment Refusal
Ventilators
Withholding Treatment
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http://worldcatlibraries.org/registry/gateway?version=1.0&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&atitle=Sedation+before+Ventilator+Withdrawal:+Can+It+Be+Justified+by+Double+effect+and+Called+"allowing+a+Patient+to+Die"?+&title=Journal+of+Clinical+Ethics.++&volume=2&issue=2&pages=122-124&date=1991&au=Devettere,+Raymond+J.http://hdl.handle.net/10822/735035
Abstract
...Recognizing that sedation and ventilator withdrawal have a causal impact on a patient's death does not open the door to active euthanasia but helps resist it by showing clearly where the debate centers. The heart of the euthanasia issue is not whether providers play a causal role in patients' deaths. They obviously often do when they withdraw burdensome or futile treatment or provide comfort, and these actions can be morally justified in appropriate circumstances. The key point is whether we can morally justify physicians playing two stronger causal roles: providing drugs and information for suicide and doing something in order to kill their patients. Before we can agree with those ethicists who argue that one can justify assisted suicide and active euthanasia despite the moral tradition that has shunned these causal roles, they must clearly show that the human good -- the good of the professions and of society at large, as well as the good of patients -- will be better served by physicians assisting in suicide and giving lethal injections....Date
2015-05-05Identifier
oai:repository.library.georgetown.edu:10822/735035Journal of Clinical Ethics. 1991 Summer; 2(2): 122-124.
1046-7890
http://worldcatlibraries.org/registry/gateway?version=1.0&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&atitle=Sedation+before+Ventilator+Withdrawal:+Can+It+Be+Justified+by+Double+effect+and+Called+"allowing+a+Patient+to+Die"?+&title=Journal+of+Clinical+Ethics.++&volume=2&issue=2&pages=122-124&date=1991&au=Devettere,+Raymond+J.
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/735035