domingo, 1 de septiembre de 2019

BioEdge: Why the mentally ill deserve access to assisted suicide

BioEdge: Why the mentally ill deserve access to assisted suicide

Bioedge

Why the mentally ill deserve access to assisted suicide
     
Not waving but drowning / Ian Espinosa on Unsplash
A state of non compos mentis might seem like an excellent reason to remove people from the pool of those eligible for euthanasia. But what if they had signed an advance directive instructing their carers to have them euthanised if they became non compos mentis? What if they float in and out of dementia? What if they seem happy with their life?
This is one of euthanasia’s most sternly contested battlefields. In a recent article on the Journal of Medical Ethics website, Australian philosopher Joshua James Hatherley present three arguments in support of his belief that physician-assisted suicide is morally permissible for people with psychiatric conditions.
It is often argued that  “psychiatric conditions compromise a person’s decision-making capacity”. True enough, says Hatherley -- but not all psychiatric conditions and not all persons. Excluding anyone with a psychiatric illness is discriminatory. They should be assessed in a more granular fashion to see if they can give their informed consent.
A person’s psychiatric condition may eventually be treatable. But why should they wait, asks Hatherley. If they have suffering for years, it is unlikely that relief is on its way “The certainty of relief that PAS [physician-assisted suicide] would bring, then, would be far preferable to the uncertainty of further dubious treatments.”
Many people fear that PAS for people with mental illness is simply too risky for society. It might decrease investment in mental health. It might also remove hope from the horizon of patients and make their suffering unbearable. However, Hatherley points out, this is also true for people with physical illness – and they are allowed to access PAS.
Hatherley’s ace is the notion of discrimination. He concludes:
“ … in jurisdictions wherein PAS is currently permitted for those suffering from somatic conditions, the exclusion of psychiatric patients on the basis of any of the three arguments addressed in this paper would constitute an instance of unjustifiable discrimination against those suffering from psychiatric conditions.”
Michael Cook is editor of BioEdge
Bioedge

Nearly every week, it seems, you read about the discovery of a new gene explaining inexplicable behaviour -- internet addiction, obesity, voting conservative, voting liberal, infidelity, divorce, chocaholism, alcoholism, whatever.

I recall that a few years ago a New York judge even handed down a harsher-than-usual sentence because a defendant had a gene for viewing child pornography. The fact that the gene had not been discovered did not deter him. Someday it would be.

In short, the notion of genetic determinism seems to have a full nelson on the American imagination. So it comes as no surprise that homosexuality is believed, from North to South, and East to West, to be genetically determined. The most influential voice on this score is probably Lady Gaga, whose mega-hit “Born This Way” has been viewed about 300 million times on YouTube.

Fortunately or unfortunately, it’s looking like Lady Gaga was wrong. Researchers at MIT and Harvard’s Broad Institute have found that “it is impossible to meaningfully predict an individual’s same-sex sexual behavior from genetics”. If this study holds up, it is bound to shift the goal posts in the debate over homosexuality. Read about it below and post your comments.

 
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Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
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