“and even if it sounded like it was off a checklist, what she heard was, ‘does your life really have any value to you? because we can end it for you.'”
suffering is “so personal, and it looks different for everybody,” hendricks said. “if you don’t know the patient very well, if all that you have is a list of their medical issues and their external appearance, how can you, as a physician or a nurse, speak to their experiences and decide in an instant, ‘oh, they must be suffering so much that maybe we should offer to help them end their lives?
“i don’t understand how that could be coming from anywhere but a place of bias.”
grant said the thrust of the college’s approach to maid and conscientious objection “is to make clear that the patient’s rights are paramount” and to ensure that “the care available and provided to patients does not vary according to the belief structure of the physician providing the care.”
assisted death is “increasingly becoming part of the dialogue between patients and physicians, particularly when the patients have grievous and irremediable conditions,” he said.
the nova scotia woman isn’t opposed to maid. “i’m not a ‘right wing nut job’ with a ‘christo-fascist agenda,'” she said in response to some of the comments posted on social media following the telegraph story. “i have no religious or political agendas to push.” the u.k. parliament is considering a bill that would legalize assisted dying in britain for the terminally ill.