Abstract
Not everyone finds a “salvific meaning”
in suffering. Indeed, even those who do subscribe to this
interpretation recognize the responsibility of each
individual to show not only sensitivity and compassion
but render assistance to those in distress. Pharmacologic
hypnosis, morphine intoxication, and terminal sedation
provide their own type of medical “salvation”
to the terminally ill patient suffering unremitting pain.
More and more states are enacting legislation that recognizes
this need of the dying to receive relief through regulated
administration of controlled substances. Wider legislative
recognition of this need would go far toward allowing physicians,
in the exercise of their reasonable medical judgment, to
administer a range of narcotics and barbiturates to the
terminally ill without fear of legal sanctions. Sadly, social
attitudes and governmental concerns about the spread of drug
addiction provide an undeniable policy nexus that impedes unduly
a rational approach or exception for the treatment of pain
experienced by the dying.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Health Policy,Issues, ethics and legal aspects,Health (social science)
Cited by
7 articles.
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