Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Husband Takes Schiavo Fight Back to Politicians

Husband Takes Schiavo Fight Back to Politicians

Bob Child/Associated Press

Michael Schiavo with Ned Lamont, who won the Democratic primary in Connecticut last week. Mr. Lamont’s opponent, Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, had supported federal court intervention in Terri Schiavo’s case.

Published: August 16, 2006

CLEARWATER, Fla. — The curtains are still drawn tight at Michael Schiavo’s home on a quiet cul-de-sac here, and in some ways he remains as private and unknowable as when his wife Terri was the focus of a fervent national debate last year about life and death.

Steve Lewis/Loveland Reporter-Herald, via Associated Press

Mr. Schiavo leaving the office of Representative Marilyn Musgrave, Republican of Colorado, after giving her a letter on July 12.

Yet Mr. Schiavo, who won a scorching legal battle to remove his brain-damaged wife’s feeding tube, also remains furious at lawmakers in Tallahassee and Washington who intervened in the case. Hence the creation last winter of TerriPAC, a federal political action committee aimed against politicians who tried to stop Ms. Schiavo’s death, and the debut of Mr. Schiavo, a newly remarried, self-described normal guy, as a political weapon in this year’s midterm elections.

He is an unpolished speaker, sometimes abandoning sentences midstream or grasping for the right words. He did not vote or follow the news until recently, he says, and had never heard of a PAC until strangers suggested he start one late last year.

Still, Mr. Schiavo flew to Connecticut last month to help Ned Lamont, who defeated Senator Joseph I. Lieberman in the Democratic primary. Mr. Schiavo reminded voters that Mr. Lieberman had supported an emergency bill asking a federal court to consider reinserting Ms. Schiavo’s feeding tube days before she died in March 2005. Ms. Schiavo’s parents, who adamantly opposed her death and rejected Mr. Schiavo’s claim that she would have wished it, had pleaded with Congress and President Bush to intervene.

Mr. Schiavo also hand-delivered a caustic letter to Representative Marilyn Musgrave, Republican of Colorado, who outspokenly opposed Ms. Schiavo’s death, and endorsed her Democratic opponent, Angie Paccione. He attended a bloggers’ convention in Las Vegas in June to raise his profile in the online pundit world, being host of a “privacy roundtable” at the Riviera Hotel.

“He is the human face of government intrusion,” said Ms. Paccione, explaining why she accepted Mr. Schiavo’s offer to appear with her at a news conference July 12. “We need more individual citizens like him to step up and put an end to it. People trust somebody who looks like them, talks like them and has their experience.”

Representative Jim Davis, a Tampa Democrat running to replace Gov. Jeb Bush, a Republican, widely distributed a letter that Mr. Schiavo wrote after endorsing him in June. Mr. Davis was among the most vigorous opponents of intervention in the Schiavo case, criticizing it on the House floor before Congress enacted the now-famous measure that President Bush cut short his vacation to sign.

Mr. Schiavo said his hastily written book, “Terri: the Truth” (Dutton Adult, 2006), was meant to be his final say on the events that dominated his life for 15 years. But Democratic operatives looking toward the November elections saw gold in his lingering anger.

When those operatives encouraged Mr. Schiavo not to disappear from the public eye, the man who had kept his mouth tightly shut throughout his quest to end his wife’s life — once even jumping an eight-foot-high fence behind his house to avoid the news media throng out front — decided he had more to share.

Driving him, he said, were television and newspaper clips from the end of the case, which he did not scrutinize until several months after his wife died.

“I didn’t pay attention to a lot of it in the last couple weeks because I spent my time with Terri,” Mr. Schiavo, 43, said at his preferred meeting place, a T.G.I. Friday’s near his house in a neighborhood misleadingly called Countryside. “But when I saw it all, I thought, this is absolutely out of control.

“I had to remind people that what this government did to me, they can do to you.”

Mr. Schiavo’s PAC has made no direct solicitations, but it has raised more than $26,000 in eight months, mostly in contributions of $100 or less made through its Web site, www.terripac.com. The committee is nearly broke at the moment, having contributed a total $4,000 to five Democratic candidates in Florida, Colorado and Texas and spent most of the rest on travel, Web site design and production of a video to help with fund-raising down the road.

“We are not a big financially powerful PAC yet,” said Derek Newton, a Democratic consultant in Miami who sold Mr. Schiavo on the PAC and now serves as its director. “We are just looking at what makes sense and how we can do it.”

Like Mr. Schiavo, Mr. Newton, 34, is learning as he goes. At first he did not realize that federal PAC’s must disclose donations only of $200 or more, and filed reams of unnecessary paperwork. Though working with Mr. Schiavo could perhaps raise his own profile, Mr. Newton, who ran a mayoral race in Miami in 2004, said he was motivated only by disgust for the politics of the Schiavo case.

The PAC is not just devoted to politics. Its Web site also provides information about living wills, which Ms. Schiavo did not have when her heart briefly stopped one night in 1990, causing her brain damage. Organizers say information on eating disorders will be added to the site.

Mr. Schiavo believes his wife’s cardiac arrest was due to a vitamin deficiency brought on by bulimia, though her autopsy could not prove that. His former in-laws, Robert and Mary Schindler, have accused him of strangling her, though the courts rejected that claim.

The Schindlers and their surviving children, Bobby and Suzanne, are raising money through the Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation Center for Health Care Ethics, a nonprofit group whose stated goal is to protect “the rights of disabled, elderly and vulnerable citizens against care rationing, euthanasia and medical killing.”

The foundation collected $379,855 in contributions last year, its lawyer said. Bobby Schindler, its director, said his family was not paying attention to Mr. Schiavo’s activities.

“Our family believes our fight with Michael is over,” he said.

Mr. Schiavo will focus on Florida candidates like Mr. Davis in the coming months, Mr. Newton said, but he may also offer help to James Webb, the Democratic challenger to Senator George Allen of Virginia; Claire McCaskill, the Democratic challenger to Senator Jim Talent of Missouri; and several Congressional candidates in Pennsylvania, his home state.

Mr. Schiavo said he would also make overtures to State Senator James E. King Jr., a Jacksonville Republican whose primary opponent, Randall Terry, led protests outside Ms. Schiavo’s hospice in the weeks before her death and rallied the anti-abortion movement against it.

A spokeswoman for Mr. King, whose North Florida district has many religious conservatives, said: “We are not making the events that surrounded the Terri Schiavo case here in Florida a focus of our race.”

Indeed, some campaign officials worry that joining up with the polarizing Mr. Schiavo could cut both ways. One person with a campaign that enlisted his help said the campaign received a number of angry phone calls afterward.

One of five brothers, Mr. Schiavo said he was raised to be a fighter, a quality on display throughout his book, which was written with Michael Hirsh. In it, he acknowledges losing his temper a lot during his court battle and repeatedly attacks his former in-laws.

His appetite for combat, which helps explain why he would sacrifice some of the privacy he demanded while Ms. Schiavo was alive, is also evident in his intense gaze and in the words he chose for her gravestone: “I kept my promise.”

Mr. Schiavo, who switched his voter registration to Democrat from Republican last year, said people had asked him repeatedly to run for office after his wife’s death.

But while the prospect holds allure, he said he was content with a lower-key role for now. He married Jodi Centonze, whom he met and started dating three years after Ms. Schiavo’s collapse, in January. He works three 12-hour shifts a week as a nursing supervisor at the Pinellas County Jail and helps raise his children, Olivia, 3, and Nicholas, 2.

“Maybe down the road,” he said of becoming a political candidate. “Maybe when everybody understands and everything is fixed.”

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

CMA doctors back federal measure banning drugs for assisted suicide

CMA doctors back federal measure banning drugs for assisted suicide

Thursday, July 20, 2006

CNN.com - Experts discuss ethics of ending life - Oct 12, 2005

CNN.com - Experts discuss ethics of ending life - Oct 12, 2005

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Sponsored Link

WildGames by WildTangent, Inc.

Sunday, May 21, 2006

The Final Days of Art Buchwald: A Visit

The Final Days of Art Buchwald: A Visit
By Suzette Martinez Standring

Published: March 03, 2006 12:25 PM ET

MILTON, Mass. Renowned columnist Art Buchwald has refused dialysis, and it's only a matter of time, maybe a short time, before he dies. For a man awaiting The Reaper, he's in unusually fine fettle.

I spent two days by his side to find Buchwald doesn't see himself as courageous, nor does he feel shored up by supernatural spiritual strength. To fade away naturally is the decision he made when faced with the alternative of being hooked up to a dialysis machine three times a week, for five hours at a stretch for the rest of his life.

He said, "I had two decisions. Continue dialysis, and that's boring to do three times a week, and I don't know where that's going, or I can just enjoy life and see where it takes me."

I had come to his Washington, D.C., hospice to present to him the 2006 Ernie Pyle Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Society of Newspaper Columnists. He was due to be honored at our Boston conference in June, but now his appearance isn't likely. I offered to bring it to Washington to lift his spirits and to let him know in person how highly his NSNC colleagues regarded him.

Cathy Crary, his assistant, suggested I “come sooner than later.” She picked me up at Dulles Airport and during our drive to hospice, she talked about her friendship and career with him since 1984, his great heart, and his accessibility through the years.

“He’s listed in the phone directory and always has been. People see his name and can’t believe it’s the real Art Buchwald, but that’s how he is,” she said.

His daughter, Jennifer Buchwald, lives in Massachusetts not far from me. She and I are new friends and now she stays close by her father in hospice. Her dad had been “holding court” with a steady stream of visitors over the past two weeks. Jennifer invited me to stay an extra day with her, since it offered more chance for an audience with the king of political satire, now the newly crowned king of The Washington Home hospice.

February 28, the day I arrived, would have marked the fourth week since he stopped dialysis. That can’t be good. Would I arrive in time? What condition would he be in?

“Raucous” came to mind when Crary and I stepped through the glass doors around 9:30 a.m. and found him in the middle of a lively gab with Eunice and Maria Shriver, laughing it up over old memories and private jokes that bubbled up like champagne. Jennifer was there, as was Buchwald’s son Joel, his wife Tamara and their two small children.

I felt a bit the interloper when things quieted down for brief introductions, but Buchwald brought the energy back up with, “Let me tell you just one more story…” It’s obvious a “good dish” with his friends has him twinkling with happiness.

Art, in a blue and white striped golf shirt and blue sweat pants, wore a black tennis shoe on his left foot. His other pant leg hung loosely where his right leg has been amputated below his knee, but he gave no hint of pain or discomfort.

At a certain point, Jennifer announced, “Suzette’s going to give him an award.” It was akin to cake time at a birthday party. Everyone clapped their hands and said, “Ooh! An award!”

I didn’t know what was more nerve wracking, trying to remember my little speech or having Eunice and Maria Shriver staring at me not two feet away. Pulling the plaque out, I stood up and said, "Art, I bring you national greetings from your friends, fans and colleagues at the National Society of Newspaper Columnists. We want to present you with our 2006 Ernie Pyle Lifetime Achievement Award.

“As you can see, Ernie Pyle’s likeness graces the plaque because we consider him to be our patron saint, a legendary columnist who brought a human face to World War II with his stories about our soldiers, simply and profoundly told. And in the tradition of extraordinary columnists, you’ve shined a light on the politics of humanity. In that sense, you’ve been patron saint of political satire for almost six decades and we revere you.

“I bring congratulations and best wishes from the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.” Everybody clapped and Art nodded his thanks.

Maria Shriver said, “Patron saint of political satire. I like that. See Art? You can be a saint.”

After they left, I found myself hanging out in hospice with Art and his family. He looks great and still enjoys his food, which is a good sign. It was pure pleasure not having anything to do, but to eat whatever he wanted to eat, according to Buchwald. "His favorite breakfast is fruit parfait, mini-cinnamon buns and chocolate milk from McDonald’s,” said Tamara, his daughter-in-law.

NPR show host Diane Rehm had conducted a poignant interview with Buchwald regarding his decision to forego further medical intervention, which aired four days earlier on February 24. Buchwald’s candor was stunning. It’s said that when facing death, a man’s life passes before him, and this man passed along his feelings to Rehm, including his fears (none), regrets (none) and any spiritual expectations (he’s not sure, but probably none). Buchwald’s number is coming up, and he wants to meet his fate squarely, sans any extraordinary means of delay, thank you very much.

He read through a fat folder of fan mail, which later, Jennifer shared with me. The emails, cards and letters saluted and supported him. Many were tapped out with tears, according to their senders. Strangers wrote with relief, as if Buchwald’s decision to captain his own destiny gave them permission someday to do so, too.

The willingness to jump overboard and wave off any lifeboat seems quite courageous, but Buchwald was unimpressed with the idea of bravery.

“I hated dialysis because it had to do with sitting there for five hours. It had to do with time. Once I made up my mind, that was it,” he told me.

“The end” is not taboo talk. In fact, Buchwald finds funny fodder in knock-knock-knocking on heaven’s door.

A nurse comes up, “Mr. Buchwald, Tom Brokaw is on the line.”

Buchwald takes the call, laughing, “Hey, I’m still here and I don’t know why…”

No doubt about it. Buchwald is a celebrity patient at hospice. Not everyone gets letters from Neil Simon or daily visits from members of the Kennedy clan. But hospice hasn’t been the non-stop party it was two weeks ago, according to his daughter, at least not today, which was fairly quiet. Time can stretch out in the warm living room where he sits most of the time, napping.

Joel and his family visit three times a day. Jennifer quit school in Massachusetts to be with her father. Whenever he slept nearby, she and I read or wrote on our laptops. We took the occasional walk whenever her dad wanted something special, like a fruit parfait from McDonalds.

“You better go now, and you might be lucky to get the last one,” Buchwald said.

The cold dessert perked him up and with no celebrities to compete with, I pulled up a chair and asked him questions, like, “Art, why aren’t you afraid of death?”

“Because I don’t know what it is and I don’t have control over it,” he said.

“If you met God, what would he say to you?”

“There may or may not be a God, but I’m not going to be the one who is going to give the answers. Every religion is telling us there’s one God, but I’m not sure, so I’m not giving it a lot of thought,” he said.

His daughter asked, “Dad, did you ever have a near death experience?”

Buchwald said, “Maybe during the war. It felt like near death in a foxhole when it was being mobbed. It wasn’t a very pleasant thing.”

“Here, at hospice, what thoughts bring you joy?” I asked.

“My children, the fact that it all came out pretty damn good. Making people laugh, getting joy out of that,” he said.

Buchwald easily wrote about 8,000 columns during his career, according to Crary. He wrote three columns a week until about 1995, and penned two weekly until this past January. I asked, “Art, do you miss writing? I know you’re not doing your columns anymore, but are there moments when you’re here and you wish you could just tap out one more column?”

“No, not really. I wrote a column, a sad one to run the day after I go to heaven,” he said.

“What would you tell any humor columnists who want to be the next Art Buchwald?”

“You are what you are. At the time all these things happened to me, newspapers were a great thing. If I tried to do it now, I might not even succeed today. Newspapers don’t look at columns the way they used to.”

Through the wooden slats just outside the windows, afternoon slices of sun gave the room a warm, lazy feel. This hospice was his last stop. Was it an uncomfortable thought?

Buchwald remained upbeat, “You gotta be somewhere and this is a pretty good place.” Then he added, “Now I’m going to sleep.”

He snoozed amid gifts and mementos. A box arrived, a gourmet frozen dessert from a friend. Buchwald resembled a sleeping Buddha before a table of orchids, spring bouquets and baskets of potted flowers. Nearby, a white teddy bear wore a purple chapeau with a polka dotted ribbon and white feather, a gift from one of the Kennedy clan.

I pressed a button, and the little bear’s head moved side to side and a baby voice sang, “You fill up my thenses like a night in a foresth.”

"Hey, it’s singing Annie’s Song by John Denver and the bear has a lisp,” I said to his daughter and we giggled.

Jennifer said, “When he dies, it’s going with him.” Her father will be cremated along with gifts and pictures of his family and closest friends.

Later Buchwald took a call from his business agent. Afterwards, I asked him, “Did you have a nice conversation?”

He said, “Yeah, I told him I’m amazed. There’s no change.”

“Why are you amazed?”

“Because they said I’d be dead without dialysis. I’m not supposed to be doing this good,” Buchwald said.

“Maybe it’s the power of positive thinking. Maybe you’re being carried along on love.”

Later, it was time to fly back to Boston. My departure coincided with the afternoon arrival of two Kennedy family members. We all said hello, but now it was time for a goodbye kiss on the top of Art Buchwald’s head.

He took my hand, “Thanks, honey, thanks for bringing the award.”

“Art, any pearls of wisdom for all the columnists who love you?”

“Keep writing. Tell them to just keep writing,” he said.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Death's Waiting List - New York Times

MARCH was National Kidney Month. I did my part: I got a new one. My good fortune, alas, does not befall nearly enough people, and the federal government deserves much of the blame.

Today 70,000 Americans are waiting for kidneys, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing, which maintains the national waiting list. Last year, roughly 16,000 people received one (about 40 percent are from living donors, the others from cadavers). More are waiting for livers, hearts and lungs, which mostly come from deceased donors, bringing the total to about 92,000. In big cities, where the ratio of acceptable organs to needy patients is worst, the wait is five to eight years and is expected to double by 2010. Someone on the organ list dies every 90 minutes. Tick. Tick. Tick.

Until my donor came forward, I was desperate. I had been on the list only for a year and was about to start dialysis. I had joined a Web site, MatchingDonors.com, and found a man willing to give me one of his kidneys, but he fell through. I wished for a Sears organ catalog so I could find a well-matched kidney and send in my check. I wondered about going overseas to become a "transplant tourist," but getting a black market organ seemed too risky.

Paradoxically, our nation's organ policy is governed by a tenet that closes off a large supply of potential organs — the notion that organs from any donor, deceased or living, must be given freely. The 1984 National Organ Transplantation Act makes it illegal for anyone to sell or acquire an organ for "valuable consideration."

In polls, only 30 percent to 40 percent of Americans say they have designated themselves as donors on their driver's licenses or on state-run donor registries. As for the remainder, the decision to donate will fall to their families who are as likely as not to deny the hospital's request. In any event, only a small number of bodies of the recently deceased, perhaps 13,000 a year, possess organs healthy enough for transplanting.

The verdict is in: relying solely on altruism is not enough. Charities rely on volunteers to help carry out their good works but they also need paid staff. If we really want to increase the supply of organs, we need to try incentives — financial and otherwise.

Many transplant experts recognize this, proposing initiatives that would allow people to give their organs in exchange for tax breaks, guaranteed health insurance, college scholarships for their children, deposits in their retirement accounts, and so on. Ethics committees of United Network for Organ Sharing, the American Society of Transplant Surgeons and the World Transplant Congress, along with the President's Council on Bioethics and others, have begun discussing the virtues of such incentives.

Against this backdrop of mounting frustration, the Institute of Medicine, part of the National Academy of Sciences, this month issued a report titled, "Organ Donation: Opportunities for Action." Unfortunately, the report more properly should be subtitled "Recommendations for Inaction."

Basically, it recommended only one new initiative: expanding donor eligibility to patients who died of cardiac arrest. (Organs now can be retrieved only from those who suffer brain death.) This makes sense, as more people die because their heart stops than because of brain damage.

But even so, this new supply will fall far short of need. At the very least, the report should have shown enthusiasm for other initiatives. One is the popular and effective European practice of "presumed consent" in which citizens are considered donors at death unless they sign an anti-donor (or opt-out) card.

Another possibility it could have recommended was pilot studies using incentives in a regulated market. One model resembles a "futures" market in cadaver organs. A potential donor could receive compensation — outright payment, a sizable contribution to a charity of his choice or lifetime health insurance — in installments before death or to his estate afterwards in exchange for permission to recover his organs at death.

Why so timid? The Institute of Medicine cautioned against treating the body as if it were "for sale." But that's outdated thinking: we've accepted markets for human eggs, sperm and surrogate mothers. A recent poll by researchers in Pennsylvania found that 59 percent of respondents favored the general idea of incentives, with 53 percent saying direct payments would be acceptable.

Some critics worry that compensation for kidney donation by the living would be most attractive to the poor and hence exploit them. But if it were government-regulated we could ensure that donors would receive education about their choices, undergo careful medical and psychological screening and receive quality follow-up care. We could even make a donation option that favors the well-off by rewarding donors with a tax credit. Besides, how is it unfair to poor people if compensation enhances their quality of life?

Paying for organs, from the living or deceased, may seem distasteful. But a system with safeguards, begun as a pilot to resolve ethical and practical aspects, is surely preferable to the status quo that allows thousands to die each year. As the International Forum for Transplant Ethics put it: "The well-known shortage of kidneys for transplantation causes much suffering and death. If we are to deny treatment to the suffering and dying, we need better reasons than our own feelings of disgust."

Sunday, May 14, 2006

British House of Lords reject Euthanasia Bill

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Did mercy killer help paralysed bligger end his life? - World - Times Online

Did mercy killer help paralysed bligger end his life? - World - Times Online

Lords to debate right-to-die bill - World - theage.com.au

Lords to debate right-to-die bill - World - theage.com.au

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia and The Healthcare Connection - PART 4 - By Karen Ward, RN

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia and The Healthcare Connection - PART 4 - By Karen Ward, RN

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia And The Healthcare Connection - PART 3 - By Karen Ward, RN

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia And The Healthcare Connection - PART 3 - By Karen Ward, RN

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia and The Healthcare Connection - PART 2

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia and The Healthcare Connection - PART 2

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia and the Healthcare Connection - PART 1 - By Karen Ward, RN

Myra Christopher, Euthanasia and the Healthcare Connection - PART 1 - By Karen Ward, RN

News from Spain: Euthanasia in Spain

Euthanasia in Spain

The whole debate about Euthanasia and the right of terminal patients to end their own life has been opened up once again by the death of a a pentaplegic man, Jorge Leon, this weekend.

Eight years ago Spain was gripped by the story of Ramon Sampedro, who became a quadriplegic after a diving accident when he was 25 and spent the rest of his life (29 years) on a bed unable to move. He took his case to court and appealed to be granted the right to end his own life with the help of others, but his requests to do so were repeatedly denied by the Spanish government. Alejando Almenabar's film about Sampedro's fight, The Sea Inside, won the oscar for the best foreign film in 2004.

The Spanish Catholic Church claims euthanasia is immoral and antisocial, and according to Spanish law anyone who helps people like Ramon Sampedro and Jorge Leon to end their own life can be tried and found guilty of manslaughter.

Jorge Leon became a pentaplegic after an accident 6 years ago, and his family say he did not want to spend years suffering, unable to breath without assistance and unable to move anything from his neck down. He shared his wish to die and his experience of being locked inside a useless body in a blog where he published regular articles describing his feelings and asking for the right to have a dignified death. He criticised the fact that because euthanasia is illegal in Spain, people wanting to end their life had to do so without the medical expertise which could minimise any potential suffering. In his blog he expressed his desire to find "a hand to hold the glass, a clever hand that can make up for my useless one, a hand to act according to my will, which is still free". He published his last article on 2nd May.

His body was found last week in his flat with a glass next to his chair and his artificial breathing machine turned off. His family have released a statement in which they have asked police not to start a search to find the person who helped Jorge to carry out his final wish.

Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | Man held in euthanasia case

Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | Man held in euthanasia case

News From LifeNews.com

British Cancer Patient Glad He Didn't Use Assisted Suicide, Opposes Euthanasia

by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
May 8, 2006

London, England (LifeNews.com) -- A British cancer patient says he's glad he didn't use assisted suicide to take his own life and now he's helping fight against a bill that would legalize euthanasia in the UK. David Williams, a 51 year-old man from Cardiff, is a father of three with a spinal tumor who considered ending his life.

Williams was diagnosed with the tumor in 1990 that left him in "excruciating pain."

"I was 35 at the time and they (the surgeons) brought me down and said, 'In two years you will probably be in a wheelchair and you probably won't reach 40,' " he told the BBC.

"It was a bit of a bolt out of the blue really," he added.

Williams told the BBC that the six months after the operation he relied heavily on friends and family and palliative care.

"While I was in all sorts of pain and agony it was very clear to me the distress I was causing the family, especially with Lynne just having (had) the baby and having two children I did consider euthanasia," he said,

"It was an option at the time because of the pain," he told the BBC. "But having said that, having children and the baby I said 'no, I'm going to fight this,' and I am glad that I have done that."

Now, Williams is fighting a bill that would legalize assisted suicide in England. The measure is expected to be debated in the House of Lords this week.

He told the BBC he worries assisted suicide will be used for the "wrong reasons."

"And you have all sorts of other issues coming into it then and, dare I say it, families will get involved and I think it would be wrong," he said.

Wesley J. Smith, an attorney and bioethicist in the United States, say stories like Williams' get too little attention.

"I know of several stories like this, including my last hospice patient Bob (I was a volunteer), who died of ALS and who wanted to go to Kevorkian but ended up so grateful that he didn't," Smith explained.

Smith said he was glad to see Williams oppose the bill "that would legalize Oregon-style assisted suicide."

Spain News - Police investigate possible assisted suicide

Spain News - Police investigate possible assisted suicide: "'I have prepared everything so that the person who's going to help me will remain incognito,' these words have appeared on the internet blog of `a friend´ of Jorge León (archive photo), a paraplegic man from Valladolid, who was found dead at his home last Thursday, and who had been looking for someone to help him to commit suicide.

The blog could belong to a second paraplegic man, Lucas S, who was sent the letter by Jorge León, although there are those who believe that Lucas S was, in fact, Jorge León himself. The blog explains: 'I've now entered what I believe to be the terminal stage because on top of the irreversible paralysis, I'm constantly getting infections which are becoming immune to antibiotics, which provokes unbearable physical and mental suffering.' Faced with imminent admittal to a hospice, León set out to find someone prepared to help him end his life.

Jorge (53) broke his neck in 2000 when he fell from a horizontal exercise bar two metres from the ground at his home while he was chatting to his girlfriend. Police found him at his home, with no signs of violence, although he had been disconnected from the machine that had been helping him to breathe artificially, and have opened an investigation to determine cause of death and whether or not someone actually did help him to take his own life."

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Wichita Eagle | 04/09/2006 | Legal opinion faults Okla. right-to-die law

Wichita Eagle | 04/09/2006 | Legal opinion faults Okla. right-to-die law

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Hey I need a room. Might as well post it here too

Decent Guy looking for a Non insane roomate situation in New York City

Hi My name is Mark and I'm a dude looking for a decent room in a decent place with decent people. While I like having a good relationship with my roommates, we don't in fact have to be best friends. If however we get along well and can hang out all the better.

-Some things about me

- My rent is always on time

- I'm not picky about your lifestyle/Gay/Straight/Fetish/whatever I don't care. (Well frankly if your a furry a heads up would be cool)

-I do require relatively quiet weeknights. Quiet meaning not absolute silence but rather a relatively low volume. (Meaning I work during the day and sleep at night and while I don't want you to keep my hours at all if you're going to be watching one of those Japanese Tentacle Porn movies at full surround sound stereo or having a crush fetish party at 2:00 AM on a weeknight all I ask is for is a little consideration)


- I am a smoker and am looking for a place that either allows it or has a balcony. If your Ad prominently states that you're a NON- smoker or smoke outside (meaning if I want a cigarette at 3:00 Am which I often do I don’t want to have too involve putting on shorts and a tee shirt in the middle of February and standing in the snow because I'm too damn lazy to get fully dressed for a smoke in the middle of winter. Then I'll catch Pneumonia, which will mutate into Ebola and upon my death you will be wracked with guilt.) So if you're a Non-Smoker please don’t reply to me offering me a Non-Smoking room.



- I'm someone you can trust, I'm pretty much a computer nerd, and I have great references and solid work.

- I don't drink (though I don't care if you do) I don't do drugs (though I don't care if you do stuff along the lines of 6 foot tall bong hits of kind bud.) If you do harsh drugs, which includes but is not limited to anything that can either be snorted or injected, smoked with a blow torch , or requires a small laboratory and fertilizer to prepare please give this ad a pass -I WILL NOT LIVE IN AN ENVIORONMENT WHICH IS BASED ON A LIFESTYLE OF HARD DRUG ABUSE However any drug abuse that involves you and your friends watching 3 hours of Spongebob and debating the societal aspects of it is acceptable as long as you understand I will silently mock you..(I will however contribute to the snack fund just to be a good sport).


- I am an adult male, I reserve the right to have both male and female friend's over for the night/Weekend.

My guests will be respectful of you and your space.


- I require Cable Broadband access if you don’t have it . I need it to be ok if I have it installed on my dime.


- I need to be within walking distance to the subway. Walking means within 4 blocks not "It's one bus and then a half mile walk." It means when I drag my fat ass out of bed at 6 am I don’t want to complete a 5k run to make it to work on time (I honestly don't even know what distance 5k is but you get my picture).


- Due to previous interactions with people looking for a roommate I feel I must lay down some ground rules on the process.

Any Living situation that requires me to give you a pint of blood in order for you to perform some sort of Santeria cleansing ritual is out. Similarly are any arraignments that involve sacrifice of any animals. As well I'm ruling out any sort of Carlos Castenada Type situations that require me to ingest hallucinigens and find my spirit animal, Any Ceremony which requires anything called or that sounds like a " Blood Sweat" is out!

And anything that in any way involves anything invasive should also be considered off limits. You may burn sage in my room but thats it.

Also for very religious folks . I worship a head of cabbage named Ralph. It works for me. Like Jesus turned the water into wine so does Ralph turn the Mayo into Cole Slaw, When he dies I consume ralph as cole slaw thereby handeling the communion aspect a part of Ralph is then placed into water and he rises from the dead as he is planted again, there you hav ressurection. So if your goal is to convince me that I should or should not dedicate my spiritual life to anything but my cabbage please take a pass on this ad.



Also and I can't stress this enough.. ANY ROOM THAT REQUIRES OTHER PEOPLE TO WALK THROUGH MY ROOM IN ORDER TO USE THE BATHROOM OR THE KITCHEN IS NOT A ROOM.

I'm totally ok with animals however if your animal has some sort of rare disease which requires me to be tolerant of copious amounts of Blood , Vomit and or Feces or Urine not in the proper place , please advise me.


I'm looking to make a move sometime in Spring. May 1 earliest.

If interested email me at bleiblog@blogspot.com

Supreme Court Decision in Right-to-Die Debate May Signal Time Out

In mid-January, when the Supreme Court rejected the Bush administration's effort to use federal drug-control legislation to block Oregon's law permitting doctor-assisted suicide for the terminally ill, the decision touched off predictions that the practice might again become a high priority on the national agenda.

"Assisted-Suicide Decision May Bring New Effort Here," read a Page 1 headline in The Seattle Times. Advocates and opponents of legalizing physician-assisted suicide in Washington State, where voters rejected such a proposal in 1991, were sizing up the prospects — and the costs — of a new campaign.

Under another front-page headline ("Suicide Ruling Reopens Debate"), USA Today noted that bills to legalize doctor-assisted suicide were afloat in the legislatures of California and Vermont and had recently bobbed up and down in other states. The Supreme Court decision, the article reported, could give those measures a new impetus — or, on the other hand, spur a drive on Capitol Hill to block them.

Not quite a month later, it is less clear whether the decision will actually start a new debate or merely signal a time out in the old one. No matter: the question will not go away. The public is about evenly divided over legalizing doctor-assisted suicide. A poll last November by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found 46 percent of the public in favor and 45 percent opposed, a difference well within the survey's margin of sampling error.

The Pew researchers released their findings early last month as evidence of strong public support for the "right to die" — certainly an accurate conclusion once one pierces the ambiguity of that phrase.

For many people, the right to die means the right to refuse medical means of staying alive if they are painful or burdensome — or to have others make that decision in the event that the person becomes incompetent.

For others, the right to die means the right to take one's own life in extreme or hopeless circumstances — or to have others end one's life if one needs help doing it.

Some thinkers have maintained that this distinction between allowing death to occur by forgoing treatment and bringing it about by a direct action is not morally meaningful. But the public does not see it that way. The right to die that Americans want to see protected by law is the "allowing" kind. They are even split over actively bringing death about, and further split into camps sharply defined by religion.

"By two to one (61 percent to 30 percent), white evangelical Protestants opposed physician-assisted suicide laws; by nearly identical margins, white mainline Protestants and seculars approve of such laws," the Pew researchers reported. "Catholics, on balance, oppose such laws (by 50 percent to 40 percent)."

In striking contrast, by more than eight to one, Americans want laws to make sure that terminally ill patients can reject life-sustaining treatment. In 1990, the ratio was six to one, with the greatest shifts having occurred since then among the elderly, white Roman Catholics and those saying they have given a great deal of thought to end-of-life issues.

The Pew survey has data to encourage almost every viewpoint in right-to-die discussions. And that is good news. It shows that the public can make the kind of distinctions necessary for addressing this complex debate. It also shows that the pollsters had the knowledge and skill to design questions allowing for such distinctions.

For example, the public responded differently to the query about legalizing doctor-assisted suicide than to a question about "a moral right" to end one's life under various conditions. Neither those in favor of legal doctor-assisted suicide nor those against it constitute a majority, but a full 60 percent acknowledged "a moral right" to take one's own life when "suffering great pain" and having "no hope of improvement." Smaller percentages recognized such a moral right under less extreme circumstances.

Similarly, when asked whether doctors and nurses should do everything possible to save a life "in all circumstances" or should sometimes allow a patient to die, people responded differently than when asked what they would want done in their own case.

A large and growing percentage (to 34 percent in 2005 from 28 percent in 1990) wanted everything done to save their own lives. Only 22 percent would make doing everything to save a life the rule in all cases, although that number, too, has increased since 1990.

Those strongly affirming doing everything medically possible for patients as well as for themselves tend to fall into two categories. On one side are those with less direct confrontation with end-of-life issues — younger respondents and people who report having thought less about these questions or having never been involved in such decision making for a loved one.

On the other side are low-income Americans and members of minorities, especially African-Americans, who may suspect that talk of ending treatment and allowing patients to die will work especially to their disadvantage.

Those who have helped make end-of-life medical decisions for loved ones or thought a great deal about their own preferences are more likely to entertain the possibility of ending treatment, whether for themselves or others; they are also more likely to believe that suicide can be morally justified and to favor doctor-assisted suicide.

Those hoping for ethical consensus in this area will take heart from the growth the survey found in Americans' readiness to discuss end-of-life questions.

Ninety-five percent of the public has heard of living wills, up from 71 percent in 1990. Almost 30 percent now report having one, up from 12 percent in 1990. Spouses are discussing their wishes regarding end-of-life treatment with each other. So are adult children with elderly parents.

The number of Americans either not thinking about these matters or not discussing them with anyone is sharply down since 1990. So are suspicions that medical personnel ignore the views of patients and families anyway. And a third of those attending religious services at least once or twice a month report hearing clergy members address end-of-life issues — not as many as recall their clergyman or woman speaking about abortion (52 percent) or Iraq (50 percent) but more than on the death penalty (27 percent).

Whenever the next round of debates begins, the public may actually be prepared to think beyond the emotional appeals and simple slogans.

The Doctor Will See You for Exactly Seven Minutes

WHEN politicians speak of America's health care needs, they often miss an important point: the doctor-patient relationship has become frayed. Patients aren't unhappy just because health care costs too much (though they would certainly like it to be more affordable). Rather, people sense a malaise within the system that has eroded the respect they feel patients deserve.

There has been a shift in attitude within the profession. I see examples of it every day. I was making rounds in my intensive care unit recently when one of the interns presented a case. "This is the first admission for this 55-year-old male," he said.

"Stop," I said. "He is a man."

"That's what I said," the intern replied.

"Not exactly," I answered. Clearly, the intern didn't get it. Neither do a lot of other health care professionals anymore.

The problem has been sneaking up on us for almost two decades. As health-care dollars became scarce in the 1980's and 90's, hospitals asked their business people to attend clinical meetings. The object was to see what doctors were doing that cost a lot of money, then to try and do things more efficiently. Almost immediately, I noticed that business jargon was becoming commonplace. "Patients" began to disappear. They were replaced by "consumers." They eventually became "customers."

This may seem a trivial matter, but it is not. You treat "patients" as if they were members of your family. You talk to them. You comfort them. You take time to explain to them what the future may hold in store. Sometimes, that future will be bleak. But you assure them you will be there to help them face it.

You treat "customers" quite differently. Customers are in your place of business to purchase health care. You complete the transaction such a relationship suggests: health care for money. And then they aren't your customers any more. Taken a step further, you can make the case that the less time you spend with your customers, the better your bottom line will be. This gets everyone's attention.

"Length of stay" became a buzz phrase in hospitals in the 1990's. So did "throughput," an awful neologism for the number of patients per hospital bed per week. One of my colleagues joked that a hospital stay was a lot like a taxi ride. The institution collected a big fee when a patient got admitted, just as a cab driver saw most of his fare when he first turned the meter on.

The additional money collected over time wasn't nearly as impressive as that initial charge. The economics of the situation favored short trips, or lengths of stay, and lots of new riders, or throughput. The arithmetic worked, but I didn't notice a lot of people laughing.

Doctors in hospitals all over the country began hearing the same business language and facing the same pressures to "keep things moving." I used to be asked how well my patients were doing. Suddenly administrators were asking how long I was planning on keeping sick people in the intensive care unit. Each day a patient spent in my unit was a day some other paying patient would have to wait for a bed. Eventually, I was warned, some of those patients "in orbit" would go elsewhere, and we would not only "lose their business," but we risked losing future referrals from other centers.

It wasn't just hospitalized patients who were taking up space other "customers" could use. Outpatients "consumed" health care "resources," too. Publicly traded H.M.O.'s, for example, began restricting doctors to an average seven-minute "encounter" with each customer. This apparently kept shareholders happy. But it reduced the doctor-patient relationship to a financial concept in a business school term paper.

Doctors know you cannot provide compassion in seven-minute aliquots. But we have felt powerless to change things. The medical establishment has, many of us feel, simply rolled over and gone along to get along. It has sacrificed patients' best interests on the altar of financial return.

This leaves the solution to the problem in the hands of our patients. You, the patient, are the system's best hope. In the age of seven-minute health care, you need to realize that you employ doctors. That is, your doctor works for you. Although doctors shouldn't think of patients as customers, you can, and should, adopt a business mind-set when shopping for health care.

Evaluate what it is you expect from your doctor, then ask for it. If you are unhappy with your doctor, fire him. If you cannot get more than a seven-minute face-to-face encounter with your doctor, he needs fewer patients. The true power in the health care economy rests not with the doctors and certainly not with the backroom business staff. It rests with you. If you insist on being treated with care and respect, you will be. And the system will improve as a result.

A pediatrician I know put it quite succinctly. "There are a lot of doctors in town," she said. "There's no need to settle for one that doesn't treat you well."

In one respect the business people are right. Restoring the doctor-patient relationship will not save anyone any money. But I submit that it doesn't have to. There are other ways to curtail health care costs. Some involve high technology; others do not. None of them requires patients to sacrifice their self-respect.

We can and must reduce health care expenses. But we cannot do it at the expense of patients' well-being. The doctor-patient relationship is critical to the integrity of the health care system. It is not disposable. Turning doctors into shopkeepers who regard patients as customers is unacceptable.

How will the M.B.A.'s and the politicians respond to what can only be termed a "patient-driven revolution"? They will have to cope. I suspect doctors will be thrilled.

Peter Salgo, a professor at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, is an internist and anesthesiologist, as well as the host of the PBS series "Second Opinion."

Sunday, March 26, 2006

ContraCostaTimes.com | 03/26/2006 | Assemblywoman Berg to push assisted suicide bill

ContraCostaTimes.com | 03/26/2006 | Assemblywoman Berg to push assisted suicide bill

Thursday, March 16, 2006

The Final Days of Art Buchwald: A Visit

The Final Days of Art Buchwald: A Visit

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Wesley J. Smith on Hippocratic Oath on National Review Online

Wesley J. Smith on Hippocratic Oath on National Review Online

American deported over 'euthanasia' - Americas Network

American deported over 'euthanasia' - Americas Network

J. Grant Swank, Jr.: ENGLISH DOCS STILL KILL

J. Grant Swank, Jr.: ENGLISH DOCS STILL KILL

High Times and Misdemeanors - What the Supreme Court's drug cases may tell us about limits on federal powers. By Judy Coleman

High Times and Misdemeanors - What the Supreme Court's drug cases may tell us about limits on federal powers. By Judy Coleman

[Art Buchwald]The man who would not die

'Medieval medicine': Ore. assisted suicide claims 38 - (BP)

'Medieval medicine': Ore. assisted suicide claims 38 - (BP)

The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon, USA

The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon, USA

California Legislators Consider Right-to-Die Bill

California Legislators Consider Right-to-Die Bill

No Jump in Requests for Assisted Suicide - Los Angeles Times

No Jump in Requests for Assisted Suicide - Los Angeles Times

Dr. Ben Carson Weighs in on Physician-Assisted Suicide :: The Black Voice News :: Serving the Inland Empire for 30 years

Dr. Ben Carson Weighs in on Physician-Assisted Suicide :: The Black Voice News :: Serving the Inland Empire for 30 years

Bioethics: Economic Motives for Physician-Assisted Suicide

Bioethics: Economic Motives for Physician-Assisted Suicide

How Does Assisted Suicide Work? - A guide to "Death With Dignity" in Oregon. By Daniel Engber

How Does Assisted Suicide Work? - A guide to "Death With Dignity" in Oregon. By Daniel Engber

Chinese Official Proposes ‘Euthanasia Experiments’

Chinese Official Proposes ‘Euthanasia Experiments’

China suggested legalizing euthanasia

inform.kz

Blogcritics.org: Detective Robert Goren Fading

Blogcritics.org: Detective Robert Goren Fading

Spero News | California Latinos oppose doctor-assisted suicide

Spero News | California Latinos oppose doctor-assisted suicide

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Question of life or death Baby MB poses for us all - The Herald

Question of life or death Baby MB poses for us all - The Herald

Mirror.co.uk - News - DOCTORS: LET THIS BABY DIE

Mirror.co.uk - News - DOCTORS: LET THIS BABY DIE

SocietyGuardian.co.uk | Health | Two-thirds of GPs 'may be shortening patients' lives'

SocietyGuardian.co.uk | Health | Two-thirds of GPs 'may be shortening patients' lives'

Free Internet Press - Britain: Two-Thirds Of Doctors Believe Colleagues Are Hastening Death

Free Internet Press - Britain: Two-Thirds Of Doctors Believe Colleagues Are Hastening Death

Cambodia Assisted Suicide Advocate Deported Back to United States

Cambodia Assisted Suicide Advocate Deported Back to United States

Canada “Not Ready” for Assisted Suicide Debate – Liberal Senator

Canada “Not Ready” for Assisted Suicide Debate – Liberal Senator

U.S. Newswire : Releases : "New Poll Shows California Latinos Overwhelmingly Oppose DoctorAssisted Suicide"

U.S. Newswire : Releases : "New Poll Shows California Latinos Overwhelmingly Oppose DoctorAssisted Suicide"

Cambodia deports US euthanasia advocate

Xinhua - English

Local experiments on euthanasia proposed

Local experiments on euthanasia proposed

Salt Lake Tribune - Nation and World

Salt Lake Tribune - Nation and World

Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Columnist arrested after confessing to killing suffering aunt

Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Columnist arrested after confessing to killing suffering aunt

Hammer of Truth » Baby Euthanasia: The Final Solution?

Hammer of Truth » Baby Euthanasia: The Final Solution?

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Saga Health News - Whose life is it anyway?

Saga Health News - Whose life is it anyway?

U.S. Expat Advocate of Suicide Is Deported - Los Angeles Times

U.S. Expat Advocate of Suicide Is Deported - Los Angeles Times

Holland to allow ‘baby euthanasia’ - Sunday Times - Times Online

Holland to allow ‘baby euthanasia’ - Sunday Times - Times Online

Child Euthanasia to Be Legalized in Holland

Child Euthanasia to Be Legalized in Holland

United Press International - NewsTrack - Netherlands allows 'baby euthanasia'

United Press International - NewsTrack - Netherlands allows 'baby euthanasia'

No prosecution for Dutch baby euthanasia - 23 Jan 2005 - World News

No prosecution for Dutch baby euthanasia - 23 Jan 2005 - World News

Physician explores assisted suicide

San Bernardino County Sun - News

Friday, March 03, 2006

Neurosurgeon speaks about ethics of assisted suicide

DailyBulletin.com - News

WFTV.com - News - Judge Makes Ruling On Life Or Death Living Will Case

WFTV.com - News - Judge Makes Ruling On Life Or Death Living Will Case

Differentiating Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia - By Karen Ward, RN

Differentiating Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia - By Karen Ward, RN

Thursday, March 02, 2006

CBC Resurrects Latimer Case as Justification for Euthanasia

CBC Resurrects Latimer Case as Justification for Euthanasia

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

COMMENTARY - Impact of Feminism On Culture Of Death - By Margaret O’Hearn

COMMENTARY - Impact of Feminism On Culture Of Death - By Margaret O’Hearn

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Kelly Taylor doesn't want pity. Instead, at the age of 29, she wants to take control of her death. She wants to die at home with her husband at her...

Kelly Taylor doesn't want pity. Instead, at the age of 29, she wants to take control of her death. She wants to die at home with her husband at her...

MercuryNews.com | 02/27/2006 | Suffering a fate worse than death penalty

MercuryNews.com | 02/27/2006 | Suffering a fate worse than death penalty

World Church: 'End-of-Life' Issues Perplexing, Revealing, Adventist Ethicist Says

World Church: 'End-of-Life' Issues Perplexing, Revealing, Adventist Ethicist Says

Briefly: Russia-Iran talks are said to go nowhere - Europe - International Herald Tribune

Briefly: Russia-Iran talks are said to go nowhere - Europe - International Herald Tribune

KGWN - Trauner Says He's Pro-Choice, Supports Euthanasia, Disagrees With Iraq War

KGWN - Trauner Says He's Pro-Choice, Supports Euthanasia, Disagrees With Iraq War

Monday, February 27, 2006

No charges for Frenchwoman who helped son die

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Assisted Suicide

Assisted Suicide

DIGNITAS

DIGNITAS

Suicide groups make Switzerland a final destination - The Boston Globe

Suicide groups make Switzerland a final destination - The Boston Globe:

DO NOT GO GENIAL INTO THAT GOOD NIGHT --- DOCTOR-ASSISTED SUICIDE

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Public Agenda Issue Guide: Right to Die

Public Agenda Issue Guide: Right to Die

Journal Gazette | 02/22/2006 | Physicians underline broader debate

Journal Gazette | 02/22/2006 | Physicians underline broader debate

A fate worse than death - Los Angeles Times

A fate worse than death - Los Angeles Times

Idaho Mountain Express: Assisted suicide - February 22, 2006

Idaho Mountain Express: Assisted suicide - February 22, 2006

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Calif. Catholic leaders look to Oregon lessons on assisted suicide

Catholic Online

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

The Remnant: If you have to ask, you're not it.

The Remnant: If you have to ask, you're not it.

Kansas City Star | 02/18/2006 | Relativism collapses under its own arguments

Kansas City Star | 02/18/2006 | Relativism collapses under its own arguments

Euthanasia probe continuing in New Orleans, NPR reports - (BP)

Euthanasia probe continuing in New Orleans, NPR reports - (BP)

Dindigul carpenter seeks euthanasia for ailing son - Newindpress.com

Dindigul carpenter seeks euthanasia for ailing son - Newindpress.com

Dindigul carpenter seeks euthanasia for ailing son
Friday February 17 2006 14:45 IST

PTI

MADURAI: Unable to bear the medical expenses of his ailing son, a carpenter in Dindigul district of Tamil Nadu has approached a fast track court, seeking euthanasia for the 15-year-old.

"I love my son Suriya Prabhakaran. But I don’t have the means to save him and I can't endure the agony and pain any more," Muthu Pandi said in his petition requesting permission for mercy killing.

The Class ten student from Sitarevu village is suffering from various ailments including thrombosis, anaemia and haemophilia. Medical reports from hospitals in Bangalore and Madurai stated that he was having mucosal bleeding wherein blood would not clot after an injury.

He needs periodical transfusion of blood. "But I can't afford it," Pandi said.

The fast track court judge S Manoharan has forwarded the petition to the District Legal Service Authority with a direction to refer it to the Social Welfare Department for further action.

Pandi claimed to have sent petitions to the Chief Minister, President and Prime Minister and also approached the local political leaders, but received no response.

"Now I have no option except euthanasia. I hope the court can give a direction on my petition," he said.

Incidentally, his wife died of Haematosis.

Euthanasia, suicide & abortion

Euthanasia, suicide & abortion

Final Exit 'dicey business' | ajc.com

Final Exit 'dicey business' | ajc.com

Final Say

Final Say

Greek News - Nora Nicolaidis Suffering Ended

Greek News - Nora Nicolaidis Suffering Ended


Community New York.- By Apostolos Zoupaniotis
Nora Nicolaidis’ only wish - when doctors diagnosed she had terminal cancer – was to die with dignity. Two months ago, when we interviewed her in Portland, Oregon, she had told us of her desire to depart from life surrounded by family and friends, having “a good death”, as it was described by the ancient Greek word “euthanasia”.

Her last wish was granted. On Saturday January 14, 2006, suffering from breast cancer that had spread to her bones and liver, Nora Nicolaidis, a 62 year old Greek American, born in Egypt, drank a lethal 6-ounce dose of barbiturates and "went to sleep and died peacefully," says Nicholas Gideonse, the Portland, Ore., physician who prescribed the drugs.

Speaking to the GreekNews, her daughter Dr. Christina Nicolaidis described her mother’s last days.

“Since you last saw her, she progressively grew much sicker. Still, she managed to muster her energy to keep going. By the last month of her life, she would meditate or sleep almost the whole day just so that she could have a few hours of quality time to get up and interact with the world.

Finally, by Jan 10th, she was too week to get up by herself. Over those next days, you could see her deteriorate by the hour. Still, she managed to stay completely alert and in control. Though it was clearly extremely painful and exhausting for her, she insisted that we help her up to the commode and never let herself use a bedpan or diaper”.

Dr Nicolaidis told us that to her surprise, her mother wanted to keep going, and she continued to fight. At the same time, as time was passing by, she and her doctor were both rather afraid that if her mother waited any longer, she would physically not be able to drink the 6 ounces of fluid needed to end her life.

“Finally, on Saturday morning, she told me she couldn't take another night and that she wanted to arrange to take her medicine that day. That evening, her sister, her doctor, two close friends, my husband and I gathered around her bed. She whispered a few parting words, and then using every bit of energy she had, sipped down the medicine. Within moments, as the medicine started to kick in, she got a huge smile on her face. Her breaths slowly spaced apart and then she stopped breathing, though the smile never left her face”.

Dr Nicolaidis believes that having the option to end her life actually prolonged her life.

“It took every last bit of her energy and will to keep going those last months, and I think if she was afraid of what was to come, or if she just didn't want to stay alive so much, she would have just given up and died naturally. Thankfully, she ended up having the "good death" she so much desired. Of course she (and I) would have wanted it to be a few decades from now, but that wasn't meant to be”.

Oregon is the only state allowing doctor assisted suicide to people suffering from terminal diseases. An effort by the Federal Government to prohibit doctors to prescribe the lethal medication and assist the patients, was blocked by the Supreme Court, last month.

THE PROCESS
Dying people who want to hasten their death with a doctor's assistance in Oregon must follow procedures established by the state's Department of Human Services.

The state says these procedures take at least 15 days, require two doctors, and are available only to adult state residents capable of making and communicating their own health care decisions. No doctor is required to participate or to refer a patient to a physician willing to assist.

The patient makes three requests, two oral and one written and witnessed by two adults who are not a family member, heir or health care provider.

The physician explains the patient’s diagnosis and prognosis and offers hospice care, pain control and other comfort care.

A second physician confirms the diagnosis and prognosis and that the request is voluntary, enduring and not prompted by impaired judgment.

If either physician suspects psychological impairment, the patient is referred for evaluation and counseling by a psychologist or psychiatrist.

There is a mandatory 15-day waiting period between the first request and the writing of a prescription.

There must be 48 hours between the written request and the prescription. The prescribing doctor reviews that the request is voluntary, and reviews options such as "aggressive pain management, sedation that clouds your mind or to voluntarily cease eating and drinking," family medicine specialist Nicholas Gideonse,. who has written prescription for eight people, seven of whom have taken the medication, told USA TODAY.

The physician must ask the patient to notify next-of-kin, and must reinforce that the request may be rescinded at any time.

Both physicians and the pharmacist who fills the prescription must submit detailed reports to the Oregon Department of Human Services.

The prescription is a lethal overdose of barbiturates either in dozens of capsules or six ounces of liquid. The patient must be able to swallow the overdose without assistance from others, "to show the volitional nature of this," says Gideonse

Euthanasia Advocate Jack Kevorkian Changes Prisons, Wants Old One Back

Euthanasia Advocate Jack Kevorkian Changes Prisons, Wants Old One Back

Monday, February 20, 2006

Commentary - Assisted Suicide To Obligated Death - By Carrie Hutchens

Commentary - Assisted Suicide To Obligated Death - By Carrie Hutchens

Britain, UK news from The Times and The Sunday Times - Times Online

Britain, UK news from The Times and The Sunday Times - Times Online

NZ investigates Nitschke euthanasia workshops

NZ investigates Nitschke euthanasia workshops

Sunday, February 19, 2006

BBC NEWS | UK | Scotland | GP praises right-to-die pensioner

BBC NEWS | UK | Scotland | GP praises right-to-die pensioner

The Poly Post - Story

The Poly Post - Story

Many Americans Support the Right to Die: Angus Reid Consultants

Many Americans Support the Right to Die: Angus Reid Consultants

Herald Sun: Right-to-die group helped Aussies [31jan06]

Herald Sun: Right-to-die group helped Aussies [31jan06]

Tick 'yes' for your right to die

Thursday, February 09, 2006

My Turn: A case against assisted suicide

Burlington Free Press.com | Opinion

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Czech Republic Senate Opposes Lowing Euthanasia Prison Sentences

Czech Republic Senate Opposes Lowing Euthanasia Prison Sentences

FOXNews.com - Politics News - Terminally Ill Former Gov. Pushes Assisted Suicide in Washington

FOXNews.com - Politics News - Terminally Ill Former Gov. Pushes Assisted Suicide in Washington

IOL: 400 cases of Euthanasia reported in Belgium in 2005

IOL: 400 cases of Euthanasia reported in Belgium in 2005

Overseas clinics dodge euthanasia laws - Breaking News - National - Breaking News

Overseas clinics dodge euthanasia laws - Breaking News - National - Breaking News

Documents detail diagnosis of girl in 'right to die' case

Documents detail diagnosis of girl in 'right to die' case

CNN.com - Oregon assisted suicide law upheld - Jan 17, 2006

CNN.com - Oregon assisted suicide law upheld - Jan 17, 2006

KR Washington Bureau | 01/17/2006 | Supreme Court upholds state's assisted suicide law

KR Washington Bureau | 01/17/2006 | Supreme Court upholds state's assisted suicide law

State of Oregon: Physician-Assisted Suicide

State of Oregon: Physician-Assisted Suicide

Ex-governor backs initiative to legalize assisted suicide

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Final Say: What determines quality at the end of life?

Final Say: What determines quality at the end of life?: "What determines quality at the end of life?

Some people say that if they could have access to the best end of life care money can buy including hospice, caregiving, and pain management, they would not want or need aid in dying.

What would make the option of aid in dying no longer necessary in your opinion? Short of a cure for disease, do you feel that regardless of any advances in healthcare or policy, there is anything that measures up to having the option of safe and legal aid in dying?"

Compassion & Choices

Compassion & Choices: "Living Wills / Advance Directives

Living wills/advance directives are actually a set of documents—a living will/advance directive and a medical durable power of attorney. These documents help direct your medical care if you become incapacitated. Our living wills and advance directives services provide free documents specific to your state. We also provide a member benefit of one-on-one counseling on creating and implementing your living will/advance directive.

Your doctor should honor your living will/advance directive or refer you to one who will.

If you refuse life support, you will not be abandoned. You have the right to comfort care and pain medication.

Filling out the living will/advance directive is not enough. You should discuss your choices with your doctor and your family and make sure they agree to honor your wishes.

The living will/advance directive also allows you to name a person to direct your health care when you cannot do so. This is your 'health care representative' or 'attorney-in-fact' for health care.

Make sure you choose someone who will follow your instructions and insist that your wishes for end-of-life care be respected.

We also provide, free of charge, current living wills/advance directives forms for your state of residence. Paper copies are available for a nominal fee.

> To download a living will/advance directive for your state click here

> For a hospital visitation authorization form for unmarried partners click here (PDF)"

Compassion & Choices

Compassion & Choices

Basic Choices

Monday, February 6, 2006

Basic Choices

Dear Readers

A member recently wrote us to share a letter he and his wife had sent to the President stating what they believed to be the basic choices every citizen has the right to make over the course of their life. Any elected official must respect these basic choices.

This couple identified the following as the basic choices one makes throughout their life.

They are:

1. Procreation

2. Philosophy

3. Sexuality

4. Partnership

5. Dying

What do you think the most important choices made by free human beings are? We would like to hear from you.

Friday, February 03, 2006

Clinic Where Coretta King Died Attracts the Desperate

February 3, 2006

Clinic Where Coretta King Died Attracts the Desperate

ROSARITO, Mexico, Feb. 2 — The cafeteria of the alternative medicine clinic where Coretta Scott King died this week was full of true believers on Wednesday afternoon, all swearing by the anticancer treatments of a man who never went to medical school and has a long history of fraud allegations against him in the United States.

That man, the hospital's founder, Kurt W. Donsbach, was presiding in the brightly lighted room, asking for testimonials from his patients. Several said their doctors in the United States had told them to go home and wait to die. Then they came to the clinic and discovered that Mr. Donsbach's treatments worked.

"Nobody takes your hope away here," said a 65-year-old Catholic nun and registered nurse, who has ovarian cancer and asked not to be named.

To his critics Mr. Donsbach is a huckster who lures people in fragile condition to his clinic in Mexico with empty promises of revolutionary treatments. They say some become seriously ill or die from infections contracted at the clinic, known as the Hospital Santa Mónica.

To his admirers he is a practical healer who uses a combination of unconventional techniques to help the body's immune system fight off cancer rather than bombard the body with chemotherapy and radiation.

"We don't have miracle therapies," Mr. Donsbach said. "We have a mosaic of doing many different things to impede the progress of cancer in the body."

Huckster or healer, Mr. Donsbach and his hospital are part of a long tradition in Tijuana and nearby Rosarito, where clinics offering treatments not approved in the United States have flourished for years under a government not famed for regulatory scruples. In 1980, Steve McQueen, the actor, received an anticancer treatment in Rosarito known as laetrile, made from apricot pits. He died a few months later.

Mrs. King came to the Hospital Santa Mónica last Thursday, suffering from ovarian cancer that had spread to her intestines, doctors here said. She was also partly paralyzed from a stroke. Her daughter Bernice King and a nurse accompanied her.

Mr. Donsbach said the family had heard about his clinic from members of their church congregation. "They were faced with a wall," he said. "There was no answer in allopathic medicine and they wanted to try anything that might be beneficial."

But the doctors who saw her, Humberto Seimandi and Rafael Cedeño, told reporters they could do nothing for her either. Mrs. King's health was so precarious that they never started her on any of Mr. Donsbach's treatments. They said, though, that they tried, unsuccessfully, to restart her heart when it stopped beating Monday on the fifth night of her visit.

No autopsy was performed. The death certificate was signed by an adjunct member of the clinic's staff, Dr. Carlos Guerrero Tejada.

The hospital itself is a modest white two-story building on a dirt road. Patients wander about with IV poles, receiving intravenous drips of hydrogen peroxide and vitamin C intended to boost the immune system. In another room doctors heat tumors with microwaves to weaken them.

The building faces a small piece of Baja California beach, bathed in clean Pacific light. At sunset, if one looks out to sea and squints, the spot could be mistaken for a paradise.

For George Ott, 63, a cabinetmaker from Lake Peekskill, N.Y., this paradise quickly turned into hell. Last summer Mr. Ott was told that the kidney cancer for which he had been treated two years earlier had returned, this time in his lungs.

Mr. Donsbach's claim that 70 percent of his patients are still alive after three years, as well as his promise of a cure without heavy chemotherapy, sounded enticing to a dying man, so Mr. Ott paid $12,500 for a 10-day stay in early August. Within five days, he said, he contracted a blood infection from a dirty intravenous needle that damaged his heart and nearly killed him.

"Desperate people do desperate things, and sometimes not the smartest thing in the world," he said.

Mr. Donsbach denied that Mr. Ott's infection had resulted from a dirty needle and said the infection did not develop until the day before he left the clinic.

Some patients swear by the clinic. Luke Ring, 65, a retired surgical assistant from Texas, said he had kept his throat cancer at bay for three years using Mr. Donsbach's treatments, especially one that mixed small doses of chemotherapy with glucose. "Nothing is perfect," he said. "But the treatment here is pointed toward raising the immune system to fight cancer."

Mr. Donsbach, 72, has been fighting legal battles with the authorities in the United States for decades over claims he made about nutritional supplements he sold, as well as a correspondence school for nutritionists he founded in 1977.

None of his legal troubles in the United States bothered the Mexican health authorities. Dr. Francisco Vera, health secretary for the state of Baja California, said that the clinic was registered under Dr. Cedeño's name, not Mr. Donsbach's, but that it would make no difference, since his department did not consider crimes committed in other countries when licensing medical practitioners. The clinic passed regular inspections, the most recent last June, he said.

Mr. Donsbach dismisses questions about his checkered history or lack of medical credentials as irrelevant. He maintains that most of his patients do better than those receiving conventional therapies in the United States. "They smear me instead of looking at results," he said.

Other patients here said they had turned to the clinic as a last resort. Susan Purkhiser, 38, a stuntwoman from Long Beach, Calif., said she was watching her mother, Jean Purkhiser, 72, suffer through chemotherapy when a friend told her about the clinic. Her mother decided to stop taking the drugs, and her doctors said she had only weeks to live.

"They gave my mom six weeks to live when we were stopping treatment," she said. "I said: 'Mom, you have six weeks to live. Let's go to Mexico.' "

Since arriving, Ms. Purkhiser said, her mother's condition has improved markedly. "They don't promise a cure," she said. "But even if she were to die in two months, the experience I have had down here with my mother is the most amazing I have had."