Tuesday, 26 September 2017

Euthanasia


Paper Presentation on
Euthanasia
Presented By: Joseph Lalrinawma

1. Introduction:
A situation of a person determines what s/he should act and how s/he should response to what s/he comes across. In many cases, the context determines what is ought to be done. But there are cases where it is really confusing to know what is to be done and what is the right thing to be done. One instance may be for the case of Euthanasia. It is always difficult to say who has the authority over life. Should life be given utmost respect by preserving at all cost? Or should there be limit? Where the limit should be drawn? Who will draw the limit? There could be endless debates in the case of Euthanasia and this paper tries to bring out what are the ethical issues in Euthanasia and what its consequences are.
Definition
Euthanasia, also known as Mercy Killing, comes from the Greek word ‘’euqanatos’ meaning good death. It is mostly used in the medical science for mentioning intentional killing of human being for the purpose of ending suffering or of removing some burden.[1] However this should not be misread to be very limited for it also covers incidence like where a person meeting with accident request some passer-by to end his/her life and is killed and a soldier asking his/her friends to die at their hands rather than due to the sever injury because of war and lost his/her life. The decision making does not always falls at the hand of the patient or victim but also at the hands of those who support the patient or victim to prolong his/her life.[2] We may also say that Euthanasia is an allowed death. There may be cases where the life of an individual could be preserved even though there is no more hope of improvement. In such case a person may be allowed to die away rather than to suffer for long or than to be a cause of sufferings for others.
Euthanasia is also known as assisted suicide, physician-assisted suicide (dying), doctor-assisted dying (suicide), and more loosely by which they meant to take a deliberate action with the express intention of ending life to relieve intractable suffering. Some also defined it as the practice of ending a life in a painless manner.[3]
2. Euthanasia in History:
 Euthanasia is not a new thing which comes up recently. It rather was practiced in ancient times and has been debating issue from time immemorial. The first recorded use of the word euthanasia was by Suetonius, a Roman historian, in his De Vita Caesarum- Divus Augustus (The lives of Caesars- the Deified Augustus) to describe the death of Augustus Caesar.[4] In medical science, it was first used by Francis Bacon in the 17th century to refer to an easy, painless, happy death. Hitler had executed hundreds of thousands of mentally or physically handicapped persons of his own nation claiming that it was for their own good.[5]  Euthanasia is mentioned in the Hippocratic Oath in which the original oath states, “To please no one will I prescribe a deadly drug nor give advice which may cause his death”[6]. The 5th Century BCE- 1st Century BCE witnessed the Ancient Greeks and Romans who supported Euthanasia and even allow voluntary and involuntary killing. After the coming of Christianity, Euthanasia was regarded as against to biblical teaching and strongly condemned which resulted the reduction of its practice. With the coming of the 17th and 18th Century, the Christian condemnation of Euthanasia was in turn challenged by the Renaissance and Reformation writers.
An anti-euthanasia law was passed in the State of New York in 1828. It is the first known anti-euthanasia law in the USA. The Great Depression of America in 1930s experienced a tragic incidence as the people pleaded for being killed due to their sufferings and the notion was revived.[7] This resulted to the founding of Euthanasia Society of America in 1938. It has its agenda the legalization of euthanasia “to allow the incurable sufferers to choose immediate death rather than wait in agony”[8]. Doctor assisted suicide became legalised in Switzerland in 1937, as long as the doctor ending the patient’s life had nothing to gain.[9]
3. Different types of Euthanasia
Euthanasia has been divided into many ways, Some of the most common divisions are as follows. 
3.1. Positive Euthanasia
Positive euthanasia refers to the institution of ‘therapies’ and actions designed to hasten death. This is often known as the ‘Mercy killing’. A clear example of this would be giving lethal injection of a dose of morphine. The direct intention of a positive euthanasia is to put an end to the patient’s life which is brought up or carried out by some positive lethal actions. The chief motive proposed by the supporters of positive euthanasia is ‘Compassion’ or ‘Mercy’. But the action taken out in the name of compassion and mercy is deliberate and direct termination of a patient’s life which could be said as direct intentional killing of a person suffering by the doctors, nurses, patient’s relatives or friends. This is why it is also called as euthanasia by commission.
3.2 Negative Euthanasia
By negative euthanasia, it meant the planned omission or withdrawal of treatment that could prolong life. The term itself is used with different meanings. Sometimes it is used to connote allowing nature to take its course or in other word, to let what ought to be, be as it ought to be rather than using immoral means to prolong life.  It is often used in situation where there is very less hope or the absence of hope in curing the patient again. So one may choose to terminate the treatment and let nature to take its course. It involves direct intention to shorten life through planned withdrawal or omission of life prolonging treatment. The direct intention here is not to prolong suffering which is considered opposed to the idea of dying with dignity and peace and this is done by means of deliberate omission of even ordinary treatment.
3.3 Direct and Indirect Euthanasia
The difference between the direct and indirect euthanasia lies in the level of directness in the action and that of intention. Direct euthanasia stands for an action or omission which caused the death of a patient in order to eliminate suffering[10] and indirect euthanasia stands for providing treatment that reduces the pain but hasten the death of the sufferer.[11] In direct euthanasia the life is taken away deliberately sometimes even by adding the pain but in indirect euthanasia the pain is relieved but for good. We should also note that some writers had equated passive euthanasia with negative euthanasia and mean by it a voluntary/deliberate omission of ethically obligatory life preserving action.
3.4 Voluntary and non-voluntary Euthanasia
Euthanasia whether active, passive or direct, if done with the permission or will of the person is called voluntary euthanasia. If the same is done without the consent of the person it is known as non-voluntary euthanasia. Passive, negative and indirect euthanasia can also be voluntary or non-voluntary depending on whether consent is given or not. If the state felt the need of terminating the lives of the handicapped by terming them as ‘worthless’, it is called compulsory euthanasia. Since 2009, Voluntary euthanasia has been legal in Belgium, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Switzerland, the states of Oregon (USA) and Washington (USA)[12]
3.5 Prenatal, postnatal and adult euthanasia
The difference between these three forms of euthanasia lies at the age of the person. If the life of a person is terminated before his/her birth, it is called prenatal euthanasia. If the same is carried out after the birth during the stage of infancy, it is known as postnatal euthanasia and if the person is not a foetus or infant it is known as adult euthanasia. It is sad to bring out that we are living in a country where prenatal and postnatal euthanasia is most practiced. With the help of amniocentesis, the parents could know the gender of a child in the womb and when they came to know that the child is female, the parents aborted the pregnancy in many cases. Also after the child is born, if there is any deformity that could be a defamation for the parents in the society, they tend to terminate the life of the child and put an end to his/her life.
4. Ethical Issues
4.1 Sanctity and inviolability of human life
The Bible presents life as a gift of God, our creator and it is based on the idea that human beings are created in the image of God (Gen 1:26-27). Job 10:12 opined that human’s life is under the protection of God as it is so precious that God had sent His/ Her only son to die so that the lives of human may be saved (John 3:16) and that they may have life in abundance (I John 4:9). Therefore human’s life is not a mere physical and biological reality but essentially an ethical and religious reality, characterised by the unity of body and soul which are destined for eternal life. So the Church mostly advocated the inviolability of human’s life. Pope Pius XII even states that all human beings even those in the womb have the right to life directly from God and not from their parents or from any other human activity.[13]  The second Vatican Council also had strongly made a statement which calls all attack on human life as a criminal act. This includes abortions, euthanasia, genocide and even wilful suicide.[14] The problem here is, Should we let the patient suffer always even if we know that they could not bear it through?
4.2 Dominion and Stewardship
God alone is considered to be the author of life and death. It is Him/ Her who take and gave life (Deut. 32:39). Therefore, there could be no one who could claim authority over the life of anyone and to make judgement about it. The bearer of that life also does not have any authority over his/her own life for it is not his/hers but rather s/he is just a mere steward who took care of God’s property. Human being is endowed with the right to live a life but not with the right to have dominion over it. This, therefore, implies that human has no authority to make judgement upon what s/he does not own. It is not a simple judgement that could be passed but rather a challenge to the authority of its owner, God.[15]
4.3 Prolonging life: duty and its limits
At the above point we stood for the notion that we have no rights to take away the life of human for it is not our own but rather we have to preserve it. The possible question here is ‘To what extent?’ Should life be preserved at all cost regardless of the situation and the context? It is necessary in all circumstances to have recourse to all possible remedies? Are there any limits to this duty? We may have to say that this duty is limited by moral law because there may be incidents where putting a life to an end is very much needed with no other option left. Therefore we may have to put in out by saying that it is not always an obligation to preserve life at all cost.[16]
4.4 Killing and allowing to die
Many scholars had argued that using extraordinary means and thus allowing a patient to die by letting nature take its course is the same as active killing. The stand in this opinion is that the act may differ but the moral is the same. By active killing a person may drown a child in a tub by putting the child’s head in the water. By ‘allowing to die’ a child may bang his /her head and fall unconsciously in a tub with his/her head fully dipped and the person who sees the situation does not help but let the nature take its course. The action is not the same but in both the case the person is allowing the cessation of life. So the argument is the moral is same due to which euthanasia, as allowing dying, is also an act of killing or in stronger word, an act of murder.[17]
Moreover the constitution of India is against life taking. ‘Right to life’ is a natural right embodied in Article 21but suicide is an unnatural termination or extinction of life and, therefore, incompatible and inconsistent with the concept of ‘Right to life’. It is the duty of the State to protect life and the physicians’ duty to provide care and not to hurt patients. If euthanasia is legalised, then there is a grave apprehension that the State may refuse to invest in health (working towards Right to Life).[18]
4.5 Life support
Very close to the above point is life-support issue. The uses of respirators and feeding the unconscious patient artificially to support may be useless in many cases but only a burden for the family. The patient may be in a situation where there is 0% hope of recovery or with a complete knowledge that the patient will die after the life-support is ended. In such case, will it be very ethical to hold the life of the patient just to let the body breathe but with no longer hope of any positive change? Life support systems are mostly very costly and demands investment of huge amount of money. The family may struggle a lot to keep the life of the patient and are in danger of being bankrupt. So, will it not be more ethical to take away the supports and let nature take its course?[19]
 4.6 The Right to die
This has been a notion of endless debate from long time back. Is an individual having the right to die? There arises question whether one has the moral right, on account of some incurable and painful disease from which s/he is suffering, to ask for death or to consent to his/her being killed as an act of mercy. This had been what the euthanasists are trying to achieve so that an individual may have authority upon his/her own life.[20] Meanwhile euthanasia opposers argue that if we embrace ‘the right to death with dignity’, people with incurable and debilitating illnesses will be disposed from our civilised society. The practise of palliative care counters this view as palliative care would provide relief from distressing symptoms and pain, and support to the patient as well as the care giver. Palliative care is an active, compassionate and creative care for dying.[21]
4.7 Quality of life
Only the patient is aware of what it is like to experience intractable (persistent, unstoppable) suffering; even with pain relievers. Those who have not experienced it cannot fully appreciate what effect it has on the quality of life. Apart from physical pain, overcoming the emotional pain of losing independence is an additional factor that only the patient comprehends fully.[22] So the ethical question that could be raised is, ‘Is it not ethical to let the sufferer decide his/her fate?’ If this is to be taken into consideration, voluntary euthanasia should be legalised. On the other hand, the ownership of the life, if laid on God’s hand will negate this response.
4.8 Love and compassion
A darling pet, if severely injured because we want to show our compassion and love for it. We do not want our loved one to suffer for long. We have the desire to put their sufferings to and end very soon. Why can’t the same be applied to human whom we loved? We will, most probably, love the human kith and kin rather than our pets. But how will we allow the pet to be freed from suffering while we could allow the human to remain so that s/he may suffer more?
4.9 Care
Earlier majority of the sick died before they reached the hospital but now it is converse. Now sciences had advanced to the extent, life can be prolonged but not to the extent of bring back the dead one. This phenomenon has raised a complex situation. Earlier diseases outcome was discussed in terms of cure but in the contemporary world of diseases such as cancer, Aids, Diabetes, etc., it is now debated in term of care. . The principle is to add life to years rather than years to life with a good quality palliative care. The intention is to provide care when cure is not possible by low cost methods. The expectation of society is, ‘cure’ from the health professionals, but the role of medical professionals is to provide ‘care’. Hence, euthanasia for no cure illness does not have a logical argument. Whenever, there is no cure, the society and medical professionals become frustrated and the fellow citizen take extreme measures such as suicide, euthanasia or substance use. In such situations, palliative and rehabilitative care comes to the rescue of the patient and the family. At times, doctors do suggest to the family members to have the patient discharged from the hospital wait for death to come, if the family or patient so desires. Various reasons are quoted for such decisions, such as poverty, non-availability of bed, futile intervention, resources can be utilised for other patients where cure is possible and unfortunately majority of our patient's family do accordingly. Many of the terminally ill patients prefer to die at home, with or without any proper terminal health care. The societal perception needs to be altered and also the medical professionals need to focus on care rather in addition to just cure. The motive for many euthanasia requests is unawareness of alternatives. Patients hear from their doctors that ‘nothing can be done anymore’. However, when patients hear that a lot can be done through palliative care, which the symptoms can be controlled, now and in the future, many do not want euthanasia anymore.
5. Conclusion
Life is valuable in all ways and should be preserved. But there may be a time where the cessation of life may be more valuable for the sufferer. A fatally injured soldier in hard-core area may plead his friends to end his life as an act of mercy. In such case, it is difficult to choose what to do and what not to do. There could be no specific answer in this for it will depend on the situation and upon level of morality which the others have had. But for Christians, life is not what we have but what we are endowed to take care. So no life is worthless. Life must be preserved in all sense for there is always a room for miracle in the faith of Christians.




[1] David S. Oderberg, Applied Ethics, (Cornwall: Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 2000), 48.
[2] David S. Oderberg, Applied Ethics…, 48-49.
[5] Bernard Haring, Medical Ethics, (Ireland: Bernard Haring, 1991), 134.
[8] Emmanuel E. James, Ethics: A Biblical Perspective (Bangalore: Theological Book Trust, 2001), 373.
[10] Emmanuel E. James, Ethics: A Biblical Perspective…, 378.
[11] M. Stephen, Introducing Christian Ethics (Delhi: ISPCK, 2005), 128.
[13] Emmanuel E. James, Ethics: A Biblical Perspective…, 381.
[14] Barbara MacKinnon, Ethics: Theory and Contemporary Issues, 3rd Edition (USA: Wadsworth, 2001), 137.
[15] Emmanuel E. James, Ethics: A Biblical Perspective…, 382- 383.
[16] Bernard Haring, Medical Ethics…, 134-135.
[17] Emmanuel E. James, Ethics: A Biblical Perspective…, 388-389.
[19] Ibid.
[20] Emmanuel E. James, Ethics: A Biblical Perspective…, 390-391.

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