Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
This is an excerpt from a much longer opinion piece with the same title.
How do you feel about euthanasia as an obligation? A duty?
If you think such a thing is unthinkable I suggest you read the full article here: http://www.abc.net.au/religion/articles/2014/09/01/4078456.htm
... it is understandable why so many bioethicists believe that "a right to die implies a duty to die."
Philosopher John Hardwig, for instance, makes the following remarkable claim:
"The lives of our loved ones can be seriously compromised by caring for us. The burdens of providing care or even just supervision twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week are often-overwhelming. When this kind of caregiving goes on for years, it leaves the caregiver exhausted, with no time for herself or life of her own. Ultimately, even her health is often destroyed. But it can also be emotionally devastating simply to live with a spouse who is increasingly distant, uncommunicative, unresponsive, foreign, and unreachable. Other family members' needs often go unmet as the caring capacity of the family is exceeded. Social life and friendships evaporate, as there is no opportunity to go out to see friends and the home is no longer a place suitable for having friends in.For Hardwig, the duty to die becomes greater as we grow older, as our loved ones put more and more resources into our lives, and when "the part of you that is loved will soon be gone or seriously compromised."
"We must also acknowledge that the lives of our loved ones can be devastated just by having to pay for health care for us. One part of the recent SUPPORT study documented the financial aspects of caring for a dying member of a family. Only those who had illnesses severe enough to give them less than a 50% chance to live six more months were included in this study. When these patients survived their initial hospitalization and were discharged, about 1/3 required considerable caregiving from their families, in 20% of cases a family member had to quit work or make some other major lifestyle change, almost 1/3 of these families lost all of their savings, and just under 30% lost a major source of income."
If you think such a thing is unthinkable I suggest you read the full article here: http://www.abc.net.au/religion/articles/2014/09/01/4078456.htm