Death and Dying
When dealing with a subject such as death and dying, one might wonder just how to approach it, in order to be considerate of feelings, along with being politically correct. There are several ways to look at the choices available for the sick or old person's way to live out the end of their life. Some people believe that physician-assisted suicide is the way to go, where the physician gives the medicine in which that person can take it to end his life or the option where the physician will help that person neglect certain life-enhancing procedures and medicines (Girsh 724). Also, some people might opt toward the way of hospice. Hospice would be where the person would be able to live out the last days here more normally and then die more comfortably, at home and among family and friends, with a medical attendant (nurse or aide) nearby in case of need. Either choice is difficult for all involved because, there is still the outcome of the death of that loved one.Faye Girsh, an author of an essay written about physician-assisted suicide, wrote, "There are repeated testimonials to the fact that people can live longer and with less anguish once they know that help will be available if they want to end it." In s
Although, in some cases, all involved know positively that their loved one will die and it is just a matter of time. "Should Physician-Assisted Suicide be Legalized? Yes!". When people end their lives like this, one might wonder if they could have been healed or come out of the sickness they were fighting. The aim of comfort is part of a larger objective: to help the terminally ill live as fully as possible until they die. But, when facing this subject from the spiritual or religious standpoint, people have to rethink how they want to handle their ending of their life. Alicia Shepard dealt with seeing her mother lapse from a wonderful, energetic mother and best friend into this nearly lifeless person who she barely recognized as her mother sometimes. In Joe Loconte's essay, entitled Hospice, Not Hemlock, he describes the purpose of hospice quite well. Next, people go after the option of hospice. This is where hospice departs most pointedly both from traditional medicine and the advocates of assisted suicide. She found that many people were "losing knowledge not just of the physical process of dying, but of the psychological and spiritual dimensions of death" and then hastily choosing some illogical and uninformed way to go about dealing with their loved one's end (Webb 717). "This excerpt from Loconte's essay shows that hospice is really about finding the best end to the person's life, and not just ending it as immediately as some would like. In her essay she writes about how she encountered many deaths in her closest group of family and friends; teaching her to explore the possibilities for that person's way of dying. Loconte writes, "Even the goal of easing people's suffering, as central as it is to hospice care, is not an end in itself.
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