| |
Capital Punishment
Is activists’ favourite suicide drug “torturous”?
Michael Cook | 13 November 2010
It is unlikely to derail activists, but the drug of choice for assisted suicide activists is being described as “untested, [and] potentially dangerous, and could well result in a torturous execution” of an Oklahoma man on death row.
|
|
| Tags |
|
advertising,
animal euthanasia,
artificial nutrition and hydration,
Aruna Shanbaug,
assisted suicide,
Australia,
Australian Nursing Federation,
Austria,
autonomy,
BBC,
Belgium,
BMA,
brain-damage,
Canada,
capital punishment,
Catholic Church,
China,
Commission on Assisted Dying,
death with dignity,
deliverance machine,
dementia,
Dignitas,
Dignity in Dying,
disability,
disabled,
do not resuscitate,
Dying in Dignity,
elder abuse,
elderly,
ethics,
Europe,
euthanasia,
Exit,
failed legislation,
fiction,
films,
France,
futile care,
Germany,
Hawaii,
human drama,
human rights,
Idaho,
India,
intense care,
internet,
Israel,
Italy,
Julian Savulescu,
Lara Giddings,
law,
locked-in syndrome,
Lord Falconer,
Ludwig Minelli,
Massachusetts,
media,
medical mistakes,
medical students,
mercy killing,
misdiagnosis,
Nazi euthanasia programme,
Nembutal,
Netherlands,
New Zealand,
nursing home,
Oregeon,
Oregon,
organ donation,
organ transplant,
palliative care,
palliative sedation,
passive euthanasia,
peaceful pill,
personal testimony,
Philip Nitschke,
Philip Nitschke. legislation,
physician assisted suicide,
poll,
prisons,
public opinion,
quadriplegia,
Quebec,
Queensland,
Russia,
Scotland,
slippery slope,
SOARS,
South Australia,
Spain,
standards of care,
suicide,
suicide pact,
Switzerland,
Tasmania,
terminal sedation,
terminology,
Tony Nicklinson,
UK,
US,
Vermont,
videos,
Washington,
withdrawal of treatment,
YouTube,
Zurich,
|
|