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Home –› Fitness & Health –› Alternative Medicine
 

Ethical and Religious Considerations in Physician Assisted Suicide

 

Author: Sam Oliver

Some terminally ill patients are in so much pain that they would rather end their life than to go on suffering and experience a poor quality of life. Because of physical and mental limitations, people in pain have a much different view on living than people with good health. This altered view makes some choose certain courses of care in a debilitating illness he or she may not even consider in a healthy state of being. Many healthcare providers claim that terminally ill peoples pain can be controlled to tolerable levels with good pain management, yet there are tens of millions of patients who do not have access to adequate pain management in the U.S. alone.

Many religious organizations believe that suffering can be used to purify us. This purification can be for the caregiver and for the patient. It is a time to learn and be aware how the body becomes more soul in the process of transformation associated with dying and death. Christians believe that life is a gift from God and God does not send us any experience we cannot handle. Islam states in the Quran, Take not life which Allah made sacred otherwise than in the course of justice. And Since we did not create ourselves, we do not own our bodies. Orthodox Judaism states that This is an issue of critical constitutional and moral significance which Jewish tradition clearly speaks to. We believe that the recognition of a constitutionally recognized right to die for the terminally ill is a clear statement against the recognition and sanctity of human life.

It is clearly evident that religious influence upon PAS deems such an act as going against ones Creator, and as such, the need to pray and discern the direction of ones life and dying should be in the consultation of clerical status of ones own faith. To override such influence would take an autonomous individual whose beliefs have taken him or her from what can be known religiously to what can be known through them by the same force that gave them life. It is here that terminal patients choose a course of action from the core on ones being transcending his or her belief in their creator (religiously) leading to an active participation of ones assessed values (personal transformations) that includes their religious influence, but it is not limited to it as well.

Samuel Oliver, author of, "What the Dying Teach Us: Lessons on Living"

Author Bio:
Sam Oliver is a reputable writer. Sam likes to scribble articles about this industry.
You can also reach this article by using: complementary alternative medicine, alternative medicine guidelines, types of alternative medicines
 
 
 

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