Euthanasia, also known as mercy killing, which is defined as: the act of putting to death painlessly or allowing to die, as by withholding extreme medical measures, a person or animal suffering from an incurable, especially a painful, disease or condition. I want to look at the people who have survived the pain to live another day or the people who chose to live through the pain and later on pass away, changing so many of lives along the way. The American Medical Association states,” euthanasia is a right to the patient if it’s asked for, as they are the ones in intolerable pain.” While the American Medical Association argues about the positives of euthanasia, I argue that the American Medical Association looks past the small amount of terminally ill survivors and how euthanasia challenges God’s plans in the life and death process.
Euthanasia has been …show more content…
But while euthanasia was used it was not really understood in this time period life wasn’t generally respected, they would give the lethal doses to anybody who said they were in pain, suicide was accepted. As we looked at the early times of the debate on euthanasia there was a controversy in the early 1900’s. A movie was made called the, “The Black Stork”, which dramatically expressed the concerns people had with medicine. The film was inspired by case which Dr. Harry Haiselden, who was a Chicago surgeon who convinced parents of a newborn child with multiple disabilities to let the child die instead of performing surgery to save the newborns life. This stuck a debate in what gives a doctor the right to decide who lives or dies in this life. While looking at the decision made by a doctor to end a newborns life how can we be sure the