Attitudes of Michigan Physicians and the Public toward Legalizing Physician-Assisted Suicide and Voluntary Euthanasia

1996 ◽  
Vol 334 (5) ◽  
pp. 303-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerald G. Bachman ◽  
Kirsten H. Alcser ◽  
David J. Doukas ◽  
Richard L. Lichtenstein ◽  
Amy D. Corning ◽  
...  
Death Studies ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 479-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
George E. Dickinson ◽  
Carol J. Lancaster ◽  
David Clark ◽  
Sam H. Ahmedzai ◽  
William Noble

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S467-S468
Author(s):  
Alexandria R Ebert ◽  
Susan McFadden ◽  
Danica Kulibert

Abstract Perhaps because the public is not well-versed on the biological and medical facts of dementia (biomedical knowledge; BK), or the life experiences and capabilities of persons living with dementia (personhood-based knowledge; PBK), dementia is one the most feared and stigmatized terminal illnesses (Alzheimer’s Society, 2007), typically resulting in social isolation (George, 2010). Similar to personal dementia fear (fear of developing dementia; PDF), dementia worry has been associated with suicide ideation (Cui et al., under review), which is a predictor of accepting attitudes toward physician-assisted suicide (Wolfgag, 2017). Findings from the development and testing of a conceptual model of social comfort indicated that people with higher levels of PBK had higher levels of social comfort towards persons with dementia (Ebert, Kulibert, & McFadden, 2019). The present study is a secondary analysis of data obtained from Wisconsin residents through an online platform and community outreach efforts (Ebert, Kulibert, and McFadden, 2019; N = 645) to examine whether individuals with higher levels of PBK have lower levels of PDF. A hierarchical linear regression revealed that PBK and BK were significant predictors of PDF (β = -.13, p < .05; β = .108, p < .05, respectively). However, when controlling for age (β = .14, p < .01) and knowing a friend or family member with dementia (β = -.19, p < .001), only PBK remained a significant predictor (β = -.16, p < .01). Results suggest that enhancing PBK through interactions with people living as well as possible with dementia could reduce PDF.


Author(s):  
Margaret P. Battin

When the debate over euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide emerged into public consciousness in the mid-1970s, the debate got off to a rousing start, as philosophers, doctors, theologians, public-policy theorists, journalists, social advocates, and private citizens became embroiled in the debate. On the one side were liberals, who thought physician-assisted suicide and perhaps voluntary active euthanasia were ethically acceptable and should be legal; on the other side were conservatives, who believed that it was imoral and/or dangerous to legalize assisted dying as a matter of public policy. Over the next few decades in which this debate was accelerating it achieved a lively, florid richness, both as a philosophical dispute and as a broad, international public issue. This article aims to explore the richness of this debate by showing something of the terrain of the debate and the figures who have inhabited it, both the public figures and the academic ones partly behind the scenes.


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