By Liam Carnahan, Newser.com, November 1, 2012
A proposed law in Massachusetts to make
assisted suicide legal has built-in rules to make sure patients aren't
coerced into the decision, but journalist and author Ben Mattlin thinks the concept of coercion is murky, dangerous water, he writes in the New York Times.
The subject is close to his heart—he was born with a degenerative
muscular disease, and has shocked doctors by living for decades beyond
his prognosis. But that experience has shown him "how thin and porous
the border between coercion and free choice is, how easy it is for
someone to inadvertently influence you to feel devalued and hopeless."
There
are many forms of "invisible coercion," he says, like the "look of
exhaustion in a loved one's eyes, or the way nurses and friends sigh in
your presence while you're zoned out in a hospital bed." Doctors are
worse, because they "feel entitled to render judgments and voice their
opinions" about his life and prognosis, even if Mattlin is only visiting
for a sinus infection. With so much negativity surrounding patients
like him—despite his career, family, and aspirations—maybe
assisted-suicide laws should wait until attitudes change. Click to read
his full piece, or a counter argument here.
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