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The Right To Die A Reference Handbook Howard Ball

  • SKU: BELL-6815254
The Right To Die A Reference Handbook Howard Ball
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Right To Die A Reference Handbook Howard Ball instant download after payment.

Publisher: ABC-CLIO
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.92 MB
Pages: 394
Author: Howard Ball
ISBN: 9781440843129, 1440843120
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

The Right To Die A Reference Handbook Howard Ball by Howard Ball 9781440843129, 1440843120 instant download after payment.

In 1900, the average age at which people died in America was 47 years of age; the primary causes of death were tuberculosis and other respiratory illnesses. In the 21st century, as a result of better health care and working conditions as well as advances in medical technology, we live much longer—as of 2016, about 80 years. A much larger proportion of Americans now die from chronic diseases that generally appear at an advanced age, such as heart disease, cancer, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Should this fundamental change in human lifespan alter how society and government view right-to-die legislation? What are the pros and cons of giving a mentally competent person who is terminally ill and in great pain the right to end his or her life?
The Right to Die: A Reference Handbook provides a complete examination of right-to-die issues in the United States that dissects the complex arguments for and against a person's liberty to receive a physician's assistance to hasten death. It covers the legal aspects and the politics of the right-to-die controversy, analyzes the battles over the right to die in state and federal courts, and supplies primary source documents that illustrate the political, medical, legal, religious, and ethical landscape of the right to die. Additionally, the book examines how members of our society typically die has changed in the past 150 years and how the practice of medicine has evolved over that time; explains why the right to die is strongly opposed by many religious groups as well as members of the medical profession; considers the "slippery slope" argument against doctor-assisted suicide; and identifies the reasons that the disabled, the poor, the elderly and infirm, and some members of ethnic, racial, and religious minority groups typically fear physician-assisted death.

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