Ollove, Michael. "More States Consider 'Death With Dignity ' Laws." More …show more content…
A wrong diagnosis could lead to the suicide of a savable person. Second, doctors have the ability to play God explains Joe Messerli. Often times patients put their trust and hope into the hands of doctors, leaving doctors in control of the treatment and possibly even leading the patient into thinking assisted suicide is the best choice. Doctors also support and acknowledge people who refuse to be treated, but they are against being part of helping somehow to die. Those against physician assisted death say that ethics is not only a matter of consequence or giving in to a person’s desire to end life. It is the recognition that another person, regardless if he or she is dying of a terminal illness, is still a valuable human being (ConnectUs). Doctors should not put in a situation that they are not comfortable …show more content…
According to Messerli, “numerous ailments such as certain types of cancer result in a slow, agonizing death. Then you must consider the psychological suffering; the knowledge that a patient knows he 's definitely going to die and the pain is only going to get worse.” If doctors have enough knowledge and experience to know when a patient’s day are numbered, then what is purpose of putting that person through more pain than necessary. Physician assisted suicide gives the patient a sense of relief knowing when their time is up; he or she would be able to pick and choose when that time was. “Advocates believe that sick people who will be dying soon because of medical conditions should not be subjected to prolonged pain and physician-assisted suicide is the ethical way to do it” (Connect Us). Having assisted suicide legal would give patients the right to die on their terms and conditions and say when he or she has had