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      Assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia: role contradictions for physicians.

      1 ,
      Clinical medicine (London, England)

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          Abstract

          It is widely assumed by the general public that if assisted suicide (AS) or euthanasia (VE) were legalised doctors must be essentially involved in the whole process including prescribing the medication and (in euthanasia) administering it. This paper explores some reasons for this assumption and argues that it flatly contradicts what it means to be a doctor. The paper is thus not mainly concerned with the ethics of AS/VE but rather with the concept of a doctor that has evolved since the time of Hippocrates to current professional guidance reflected in healthcare law. The paper argues that the most common recent argument for AS/VE--that patients have a right to control when and how they die--in fact points to the involvement not of doctors but of legal agencies as decision makers plus technicians as agents.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Clin Med (Lond)
          Clinical medicine (London, England)
          1470-2118
          1470-2118
          Aug 2010
          : 10
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Royal Bournemouth Christchurch Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. fiona.randall@rbch.nhs.uk
          Article
          20849002
          7d82f6ac-f6e4-4d26-9c93-379c6ef39064
          History

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