http://www.nj.com/opinion/index.ssf/2014/08/letter_a_mistaken_prognosis_saps_the_will_to_live.html
Virtually every state’s chapter of the American Medical Association
is opposed to assisted suicide, the reasons for which were absent from
The Times’ recent editorial, “Death with dignity for the terminally ill
includes crucial safeguards” (Aug. 10).
Studies show that diagnoses of terminal illness are very often wrong.
A doctor may know someone has an illness, but determining how quickly
it might kill the patient or even if it will kill him or her is
difficult to determine. A wrong prognosis can easily lead patients into a
spiral of hopelessness and to give up on treatment unnecessarily,
thereby prematurely ending their lives.
In an age when almost every one of us knows someone who outlived
their terminal prognosis, it’s important to remember that legalizing
assisted suicide offers no second chances. No supposed “safeguard” can
protect patients from deciding to die based on a faulty prognosis.
-- Eileen Fisher,
Bridgewater
– +
I am a doctor practicing medicine in Oregon and Washington, where physician-assisted suicide is legal. I disagree with Scot Lehigh that these suicides are not like other suicides in which “a healthy person [takes] his life for reasons of despair, depression, or hopelessness’’ (“Death with dignity in Mass.,’’ Op-ed, Sept. 23).
First, doctors can be wrong. So, what looks like a few months to live can be years. For a good article on this subject, see Nina Shapiro’s January 2009 "Terminal Uncertainty" in the Seattle Weekly.
Second, despair, depression, and hopelessness are a part of assisted suicide. A few years ago, a patient of mine who was undergoing cancer treatment with a specialist became depressed, and expressed a wish for assisted suicide.
In most jurisdictions, suicidal ideation is interpreted as a cry for help. In Oregon, the only help my patient got was a lethal prescription intended to kill him. Don’t make our mistake. Keep assisted suicide out of Massachusetts.
Dr. Charles J. Bentz
First, doctors can be wrong. So, what looks like a few months to live can be years. For a good article on this subject, see Nina Shapiro’s January 2009 "Terminal Uncertainty" in the Seattle Weekly.
Second, despair, depression, and hopelessness are a part of assisted suicide. A few years ago, a patient of mine who was undergoing cancer treatment with a specialist became depressed, and expressed a wish for assisted suicide.
In most jurisdictions, suicidal ideation is interpreted as a cry for help. In Oregon, the only help my patient got was a lethal prescription intended to kill him. Don’t make our mistake. Keep assisted suicide out of Massachusetts.
Dr. Charles J. Bentz
Portland, Ore.
The writer is an associate professor of medicine in the division of general medicine and geriatrics at Oregon Health & Science University.