Nurses and the providers who agree with this are showing an act of compassion and empathy towards the individuals we care for in our healthcare profession. If someone was given the option to depart this life that we live with peace and dignity, it would allow them to restore their faults and leave peacefully. Euthanasia seems to give you the option to choose your date of eradication as it is inevitable when determined terminally-ill. Being a patient diagnosed with a terminally ill disease and having this option available may promote acceptance and internal peace. Normally, when a patient is eligible for hospice care, they are given the devastating news that they literally have less than six months to live. When this realistic fact overcomes them, the reactions are unprecedented. In this field we witness these patients give up on life and worsen mentally and emotionally which seems to accelerate this process. The families suffer a lot above knowing that their loved one will pass; the patient withdraws themselves from the family as …show more content…
It draws individuals in analyzing their own moral values. This can be seen as something negative or unforgivable in the religious community, but it can be argued that some individuals experience a clarity and reassurance. When pertaining to such a subject, I give emphasis to my thesis that if someone was given the option to leave this earth with dignity and pain free, they would mend their faults and leave peacefully. Morally, we must grant the patients the sanction for the act of Euthanasia when they are faced with a terminal illness. The choice is exclusively in their hands and no healthcare provider or any individual is allowed to influence the situation. The act passed in California has reminded these patients that they are still in control of their lives even when it is towards the end. Their opinions and decisions still are accounted for and it gives them a sense of freedom and a peace of mind knowing that they are heard, cared for and taken into consideration as they are human-beings still on this land. Euthanasia is giving these patients a voice and control into their remaining breathes and it must be an available option. It should be everyone’s right as citizens of this nation and as part of