N
noname223
Archangel
- Aug 18, 2020
- 5,435
I have a patient's decree where I explicitly say I don't want to be kept alive. But I think they would never accept that because I am suicidal. I was too scared to approve this decree by a lawyer. I am quite explicit about suicide. But more importantly I have a health care proxy to my best friend. My parents would keep me alive no matter what. Despite the fact my dad told he would never want that for himself. Hypocrite. I am scared that my parents sue my best friend for turning off the machines. But I will try to kill myself in case I take the SN.
There was thisy story someone posted it here. An American or British girl tried to hang herself. She was bullied beforehand and afterwards when she was in the vegetative state. Which is utterly disgusting. I don't want to know what this poor girl must have felt. Personally, I hope these people can barely think and feel. Because being conscious without being able to express themselves seems to be even worse. But this is very subjective.
The girl tried to hang herself. The paramedics almost gave up. But after a while with no signs of life they were able to revive her: Is rescueing the right word?
She is fully dsabled now. Cannot speak. Cannot move. I think it is not sure how conscious she actually is. I read a post yesterday where they described how people cannot control their bladder and are dependent on help to go to the toilet. After surviving drowning or partial.
The current regulation is: saving one's life no matter what. Which seems reasonable because in a crisis situation one cannot say how big the damage gonna be. And most people actually want to live and would like being saved. But after the damage is the done the situation is different.
Should everyone be forced to sign a patiernt's decree or health care proxy? Honestly, considering the insanely and extremely cruel fates (there are barely any exaggerations on this point) the effort seems to be worth. If it can be realized is a different question. Most people want to avoid dark topics. And voters would probably not like this sad topic. There are not many people who think about such topics voluntarily. The audience in suicide forum is different because for most of us this scenario scares the shit out of us.
Should there be categories where the damage is so extreme that killing the person seems to be the most humanistic thing to do? By the way today I want to post another thread about taboos on SaSu and maybe I am pushing the boundaries with this question.
I think ethically this is a very touchy topic. And forced patient's decree/ proxy seem to be the best solution. But will the people actually do the work and think about i?. I mean on a voluntary basis it is already possible to sign them. But would it even prevent all cases? Because emergency teams don't care about such decrees in crisis situation. This poor girl could not have done anything to prevent that from a legal standpoint as far as I understand it.
What do you think?
There was thisy story someone posted it here. An American or British girl tried to hang herself. She was bullied beforehand and afterwards when she was in the vegetative state. Which is utterly disgusting. I don't want to know what this poor girl must have felt. Personally, I hope these people can barely think and feel. Because being conscious without being able to express themselves seems to be even worse. But this is very subjective.
The girl tried to hang herself. The paramedics almost gave up. But after a while with no signs of life they were able to revive her: Is rescueing the right word?
She is fully dsabled now. Cannot speak. Cannot move. I think it is not sure how conscious she actually is. I read a post yesterday where they described how people cannot control their bladder and are dependent on help to go to the toilet. After surviving drowning or partial.
The current regulation is: saving one's life no matter what. Which seems reasonable because in a crisis situation one cannot say how big the damage gonna be. And most people actually want to live and would like being saved. But after the damage is the done the situation is different.
Should everyone be forced to sign a patiernt's decree or health care proxy? Honestly, considering the insanely and extremely cruel fates (there are barely any exaggerations on this point) the effort seems to be worth. If it can be realized is a different question. Most people want to avoid dark topics. And voters would probably not like this sad topic. There are not many people who think about such topics voluntarily. The audience in suicide forum is different because for most of us this scenario scares the shit out of us.
Should there be categories where the damage is so extreme that killing the person seems to be the most humanistic thing to do? By the way today I want to post another thread about taboos on SaSu and maybe I am pushing the boundaries with this question.
I think ethically this is a very touchy topic. And forced patient's decree/ proxy seem to be the best solution. But will the people actually do the work and think about i?. I mean on a voluntary basis it is already possible to sign them. But would it even prevent all cases? Because emergency teams don't care about such decrees in crisis situation. This poor girl could not have done anything to prevent that from a legal standpoint as far as I understand it.
What do you think?
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