Clearly it is not the same thing.
I just said I find physical degradation acceptable as a reason for euthanasia.
I'm not opposed to euthanasia in cases of irreversible mental or physical degradation with a certainty of a complete loss of self in the predictable future.
I just said I find an issue causing physical degradation (with death being the cause of a loss of self) acceptable as a reason for euthanasia.
When you can see a predicable unpleasant end I have no issue.
I believe Hotwired is saying that a condition like dementia, to which there is no known method of cure, isn't the same as say depression - to which there may be a myriad of potential cures.
Some illnesses are terminal, or (as good as) definitively permanent - others have a higher rate of cure & are known to be often temporary.
That's not the say the women in question was curable, I don't have the data or the expertise to make that assessment.
I believe Hotwired is saying (I may be wrong, some content conflicts with this) that a condition like dementia, to which there is no known method of cure, isn't the same as say depression - to which there may be a myriad of potential cures.
Maybe a lot of people recognise depression is a broad descriptive term for a variety of symptoms, severity of symptoms and longevity of symptoms?
Would we tell someone they were certain to die if they were diagnosed with testicular cancer because we knew someone who had a brain tumour? Would we tell someone they were certain to live when they had stomach cancer because we had a friend who survived skin cancer?
Maybe we should actually examine what the causation is and how things present and actually let the people who are truly qualified to make such judgements to make those judgements.
It's quite amazing people seem to have this notion that people just turn up to a GP say I am feeling depressed and then get passed on as described. Do you not think that maybe every avenue is explored and opportunity given.
The doctors have an oath to do good they also have an oath to do no evil. The devil is in the details of how one manages that on a patient per patient basis.
The question really is are you trying to change my mind or simply complain that it doesn't match yours.
No I am wondering why you keep taking those screenshots.
All very odd ...
Read your last paragraph again.
I agree, which is why I added the necessary caveat regarding the exhaustive process likely being followed earlier.To which I've already addressed. Depression is a not a discrete entity.
The specific post is here:
People are arguing from a lack of ignorance here. They are presuming that cures haven't been attempted and failed. The process is exactly the same as for an oncology patient. No different. They just can't get past their strange mind-body duality paradigms. Then they'll pop in a religious thread and have a laugh at believers of said faiths - what do they think makes the mind separate and distinct from the body - magic?!?
I've got a family member who suffers from a serious mental illness & at times earlier in her life she wasn't 'curable' but a combination of time & a change in circumstances have transformed her in ways professional medical care wasn't able. This is a difference worth considering between one form of illness & another - the possibility for change & how definitive it may be.
I agree they will be aware of the prospect, but it will be dealing with estimates.And of course the people who make such decisions are well aware of that and the potentiality.
I am afraid my last paragraph doesn't answer why you keep using screenshots.
!!!EUREKA!!!
I agree they will be aware of the prospect, but it will be dealing with estimates.
We don't have definitive data in this regard when comparing to another illness which may be comparably far simpler.
The amount of unknown variables would put me off being involved in permanent & irreversible interventions - that's not to say it's the right or wrong thing to do, just I'd be very reluctant to. It may be I'm viewing this from a statistical/predictive point of view as opposed to medically.
I'm not saying I fundamentally disagree with the decision, just it makes me uneasy due to the very real possibility of people being euthanized who could have recovered (everybody makes mistakes, doctors & clinicians included & this most certainly is a matter of life & death).