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- Physician-assisted suicide (6)
- Right-to-die (3)
- Compassion in Dying v. Washington (2)
- Euthanasia (2)
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- Assisted suicide (1)
- Autonomy (1)
- Cruzan v. Director of Health (1)
- Death with dignity (1)
- Equal protection (1)
- Ethical concerns (1)
- Euthanasia public policy (1)
- Fourteenth Amendment (1)
- Individual liberty (1)
- Libert interests (1)
- Missouri Department of Health (1)
- Natural Death Act (1)
- Oregon Death with Dignity Act (1)
- Patient safeguards (1)
- Physician opinion regarding euthanasia (1)
- Professional ethics (1)
- Right to refuse treatment (1)
- Safeguards (1)
- State interests (1)
- Washington initiative (1)
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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Other Law
Physician Aid In Dying: A Humane Option, A Constitutionally Protected Choice, Kathryn L. Tucker, David J. Burman
Physician Aid In Dying: A Humane Option, A Constitutionally Protected Choice, Kathryn L. Tucker, David J. Burman
Seattle University Law Review
This Article presents the argument that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the individual decision to hasten death with physician-prescribed medication and that statutes prohibiting physician-assisted suicide deny equal protection, guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, to competent, terminally-ill adults who are not on life support.
Physician Involvement In Life-Ending Practices, Thomas A. Preston
Physician Involvement In Life-Ending Practices, Thomas A. Preston
Seattle University Law Review
This Article explains that we need to acknowledge physicians' widespread involvement in ending patients' lives by a variety of means, from withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment to euthanasia. Our inquiry should move from appearance and professional acceptance of practices to the conditions under which society allows physicians to be involved in ending patients' lives.
Medical Concerns About Physician-Assisted Suicide, Peter M. Mcgough, M.D.
Medical Concerns About Physician-Assisted Suicide, Peter M. Mcgough, M.D.
Seattle University Law Review
The November 8, 1994 passage of Oregon's Measure 16, which permits physicians to comply with the request of a competent adult patient with less than six months to live for a prescription for lethal drugs, has intensified the debate over the legalization of physician-assisted suicide following the defeats of similar initiatives in Washington and California. Subsequent legal challenge to Measure 16 and the present preliminary injunction3 has shown that passage and popularity of a public initiative does not ensure its legality. The issue of physician-assisted suicide is most likely headed for the United States Supreme Court. This Article is intended, …
Exposing Some Myths About Physician-Assisted Suicide, Giles R. Scofield
Exposing Some Myths About Physician-Assisted Suicide, Giles R. Scofield
Seattle University Law Review
From my perspective, the fuss about physician-assisted suicide is about as important as re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Given the current state of our health care system, which remains in a state of crisis regardless—and perhaps because of—what did not happen last year, the legalization of physician-assisted suicide is morally essential only to those who are indifferent to the health care needs and concerns of most Americans. You now know that I do have something to say about this issue. Instead of engaging in the debate, however, I intend to engage the debate. By that, I mean that …
Seeking Compassion In Dying: The Washington State Law Against Assisted Suicide, Edward J. Larson
Seeking Compassion In Dying: The Washington State Law Against Assisted Suicide, Edward J. Larson
Seattle University Law Review
From a constitutional standpoint, the decision by Judge Rothstein is more significant than the Oregon initiative because her reasoning calls into question statutes against assisted suicide that are currently in effect in most American states and are part of traditional Anglo-American law. Her ruling goes far beyond the Oregon initiative (now the Death With Dignity Act), which created a narrow statutory exception in the law against assisted suicide. It establishes a broad, new constitutional right that will restrict legislative efforts to address this controversial social issue. The decision was unprecedented; no prior court had limited a state's authority to outlaw …
Practical Implications For Health Care Providers In A Physician-Assisted Suicide Environment, Donald E. Spencer, Ed.D.
Practical Implications For Health Care Providers In A Physician-Assisted Suicide Environment, Donald E. Spencer, Ed.D.
Seattle University Law Review
In this Article, I present key practical implications that the attorney and health care providers need to consider. I also present implications for public policy. I do not take a stand in the Article for or against physician-assisted suicide, either morally, ethically, or legally. Other articles in this Review and numerous other professional publications do. Instead, this Article begins the discussion of procedures for health care providers in an environment of legal physician-assisted suicide. An attorney who advises legal review of proposed procedures for handling physician-assisted suicide requests will serve the health care provider well. The procedures must meet the …
Reconstructing The Bill Of Rights: A Reply To Amar And Marcus's Triple Play On Double Jeopardy, Susan Herman
Reconstructing The Bill Of Rights: A Reply To Amar And Marcus's Triple Play On Double Jeopardy, Susan Herman
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.