marlonbrowndo
Senior ODI Player
- Joined
- May 29, 2015
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Had a dog that we had to put down because it got cancer. Whats your opinion on this when it comes to both humans and animals?
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Youth in Asia are the future. Numerous, prodigiously gifted, with the motivation to match. This century belongs to them.
Sometimes, things need to be done, even if they sound insensitive, because you to have look at the bigger picture.
The practice of euthanasia is often criticized for being immoral but that is because a lot of people fail to take things into perspective and believe that under no circumstances can the life of a living thing by taken by force.
As far as I am concerned and I will look at it from the point of view of my profession, if the patient himself tells you in advance to make it quick and end his suffering if he/she is not curable, then as a doctor, I believe you are obliged to obey; you definitely who the person this and respect his decision.
Similarly, if the person's family tells you do it because they realize that there is no hope and cannot see the suffering of their loved one anymore, you have to do it. What choice do you have?
And yes - these things actually happen. Rare but it happens.
Another reason is practicality. A hospital has limited resources and any individual doctor can only focus on any individual for a certain time period only.
There are time constraints as well as cost constraints. The time that you spend on helplessly trying to cure a patient who is not curable, can be utilized to help a patient who has chance of surviving.
A hospital cannot keep a patient forever that is essentially a breathing dead body. At some point, they will have to move the person on, because he or she is taking up recourses of someone who has chances of survival. However in these cases, you are ethically and morally bound to communicate with the person's family first.
People who believe that euthanasia is not acceptable under any circumstances in the medical profession will also take offense to the fact that almost all cancer hospitals, including SKMH in Pakistan, reserve rights to admit patients, because they often choose not to waste their time and resources on a patient who has no chance of survival and will be dead in a matter of months.
A relative of mine died from sarcoma back in January, which is a very aggressive cancer. He got diagnosed in September 2014 and when he went to SKMH with his reports, they told him that they cannot take him in because he is not treatable and has only 8 months to live.
According to SKMH, he should have died around the summer of 2015, but he managed to hang on till January 2016 because of chemotherapy sessions in another hospital.
Now, some people will say that what SKMH did was extremely unethical, but look at it from their point of view. What choice did they have? They treat thousands of cancer patients every day and cancer medicine does not come cheap. Can they really afford to waste time and energy with an individual who has no chance of survival?
My opinion is that any medical progressional should ne strong enough to be able to pull it off. Yes it's a difficult thing to do, very difficult in fact, but if the time comes, he or she must be able to do the right thing, but one hopes that he or she doesn't have to make a decision like this ever.
As far as religion is concerned, I would say that medical science was not developed enough in the 7th century for euthanasia to become necessary from medical perspective.
Complex drugs weren't developed that could extend the life of a person well beyond his natural limit.
It was not possible at that time for a person to stay in coma for months and even years.
Death was quicker at that time, because people were allowed to die.
Should be allowed,no point being a vegetable.
Had a dog that we had to put down because it got cancer. Whats your opinion on this when it comes to both humans and animals?
Euthanasia is to be detested on all counts.
Pain management is a better alternative.
And it is banned from religious perspective too.
Euthanasia is to be detested on all counts.
Pain management is a better alternative.
And it is banned from religious perspective too.
I'm sure 90% of the detractors are because of religious reasons.
Religion is a distracting force or is it a way of life ?
Youth in Asia are the future. Numerous, prodigiously gifted, with the motivation to match. This century belongs to them.