I’m saying “No” to assisted suicide. Will you? New web site encourages doctors, caregivers to pledge no to assisted suicide

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I’m saying “No” to assisted suicide. Will you? New web site encourages doctors, caregivers to pledge no to assisted suicide

With Washington becoming the second state to legalize assisted suicide, and others likely to follow, euthanasia opponents have put together a new web site to urge doctors, medical caregivers and citizens to say no to assisted suicide. The site comes after doctors and medical centers have said they won’t urge patients to kill themselves.
More Information:
The Take the Pledge web site urges the three different categories of people to sign an online pledge affirming they will help patients, not urge their death.
Here’s the pledge I took, which is for healthcare professionals:

I will treat the sick according to my best ability and judgment, always striving to do no harm. Whenever I care for a terminally-ill patient, I will provide optimal comfort care until natural death.

I will also support my patients’ wishes not to prolong the dying process with futile treatment. I will never give a deadly drug to anyone even if asked, nor will I suggest suicide.

I will always affirm and guard these ethical principles with integrity, recognizing that every human life is inherently valuable.

LifeNews.com reports that Wesley J. Smith, a noted author and attorney, has endorsed the new web site and urges people to take the pledge to affirm pro-life principles over assisted suicide.
“Just because assisted suicide is legal in Oregon and Washington-State, that does make it right. The time has come for a very public and vibrant declaration of non cooperation with the culture of death,” he says.
He says more efforts are needed to build up a conscientious objection to assisted suicide in Oregon and Washington, but he applauds the effort.
“All who oppose assisted suicide, please take the pledge. And in our lives, let us strive to model the kind of acceptance and love toward others that could dissuade people from believing that their own lives–or that of family members–are not worth living,” Smith said.
As LifeNews.com reports, doctors and hospitals are already speaking up saying they will refuse assisted suicide requests.
Though voters approved I-1000, the Washington State Medical Association says doctors have no obligation to participate in killing patients.
Meanwhile, Providence Health and Services, the largest medical system in eastern Washington, states it will prohibit doctors from killing patients at its medical centers, nursing homes and other facilities.
So, I ‘ve taken the Pledge and hope that you’ll consider it also. 
 

0 Comments

  1. Anton Beffa MD FACS says:

    It is a slippery slope, euthanasia. I have lost my mother and my brother to cancer. I stayed with them as they died. They died with dignity and pain meds when needed. iT HAS BEEN SHOWN THAT MANY DEPRESSED patients will elect euthanasia only to change their mind when treated for depression or after a week or two goes by. There is a cloak of secrecy surrounding the records of the euthanasia records in the name of privacy. How can we review or guard against abuses when we can’t find out any specifics of cases. Are we going to go the way of some European countries where teens have the right to assisted suicide without terminal medical conditions, without parental consent, because “life isn’t worth living”?? Where do you draw the line? I say “no” to assisted suicide.

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