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Kleespies, Phillip M. – Death Studies, 2010
This article offers a commentary on the report by Russel Ogden (2010/this issue) on the use of the "debreather" for suicide assistance by the NuTech (or New Technologies for Self-Deliverance) program. The emergence of NuTech is set within its historical and political context. Nu Tech is criticized for its anarchic and extreme advocacy of…
Descriptors: Quality of Life, Suicide, Psychology, Ethics
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Feldman, David B. – Death Studies, 2006
In his article in the current issue of Death Studies, "Can Suicide be a Good Death?" David Lester argues that each person should determine whether suicide is appropriate for him or her in relative isolation from the opinions of others. In the present article, I use a utilitarian ethical perspective to critique this assertion. According to…
Descriptors: Suicide, Ethics, Criticism, Decision Making
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Lester, David – Death Studies, 2006
The commentaries by Feldman and Leenaars are less than persuasive, insofar as they are grounded in an arbitrary and potentially inappropriate advocacy of communal rather than individual values; in unproven assumptions about the constricted and illogical reasoning of suicidal persons; in an implicit equation of their acts with "sins"; and/or in a…
Descriptors: Suicide, Logical Thinking, Decision Making, Moral Values
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Machado, Nora – Death Studies, 2005
The author examines a major shift in the conceptualization and practices relating to death and dying in Western and other societies with advanced medicine. This shift is the result of socio-technical and cultural developments characterized by but not limited to the routine widespread application of life support technologies in the hospital…
Descriptors: Patients, Death, Decision Making, Ethics
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Crow, Laura – Death Studies, 2006
The decision to withdraw life support from a loved one, especially in the absence of an advance directive, can be complicated and painful. This article is the author's personal account of her brother's brain injury, his resulting condition, and the choice made to allow his death. In addition, the author discusses how this experience affected her…
Descriptors: Head Injuries, Neurological Impairments, Decision Making, Death
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Preston, Tom; Kelly, Michael – Death Studies, 2006
The social, legal, and political discussion about the decision to stop feeding and hydration for Terri Schiavo lacked a medical ethics assessment. The authors used the principles of medical indications, quality of life, patient preference, and contextual features as a guide to medical decision-making in this case. Their conclusions include the…
Descriptors: Ethics, Quality of Life, Death, Self Determination
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Roscoe, Lori A.; Osman, Hana; Haley, William E. – Death Studies, 2006
The case of Mrs. Terri Schiavo illustrates common themes in family caregiving at the end of life but is distinctive from most family caregiving situations in other ways. As occurred in Mrs. Schiavo's case, family members do act as both caregivers and decisionmakers for their loved ones at the end of life, often without the benefit of written…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Conflict, Court Litigation, Stress Variables
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Ditto, Peter H – Death Studies, 2006
The Terri Schiavo case was unique in the media attention it garnered, but the decision making challenges faced by Terri's family are common ones encountered by all families who must make choices about the use of life-sustaining medical treatment for an incapacitated loved one. This article highlights three key issues that were particularly…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Special Health Problems, Decision Making, Disabilities