| Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | ||||||
![]() Home Current Issue Past Issues Support About IJME Apr-Jun1996-4(2) |
FROM OTHER JOURNALSAll’s not well with clinical trials (1) Doubt has been expressed by Samuel Hellman on whether a clinician can simultaneously fulfil the dual roles of doctor and researcher. The fundamental divergence between the clinician wishing to do his best for the individual patient and the researcher whose primary interest lies in collecting groups of patients suggests that Hellman’s essay (pages 5-10 of the special supplement in this issue) deserves study. The interested reader will also find much of interest on pages l- 16 of the special supplement on Ethics Committees. Voluntary euthanasia (2) In the state of Victoria, doctors petitioned the government for a review of laws prohibiting voluntary euthanasia. This appeal was rejected. In the Northern Territory it is expected that any day now the Rights of the Terminally Ill Bill will be gazetted and become operational. Patients with severe pain from advanced cancer are already travelling from other states to seek direct, immediate help in dying under this law. 70 year old Marta Alfonso- Bowes, who had reached Darwin and sought a lethal injection, was dejected when she found that the law was not yet in operation. After a failed attempt at suicide, she succeeded in taking her own life on 24 September after taking an overdose of tablets. The following news item in this journal describes how seven doctors have joined Dr. Jack Kevorkian in unveiling guidelines for medically assisted suicide in the USA. The group feels that patients and doctors and not politicians or courts should determine when incurable patients should be helped to die. The guidelines call for a written request from the patient, signed by a doctor and two adults with no financial interest in the case. A specialist in the patient’s illness, one on the management of pain and a psychiatrist will have to verify in writing that the patient was mentally competent, suffered from an incurable disease and had uncontrollable suffering. The journal also refers to a paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association (1995; 274: 1634- 1626) where a long term study costing twenty- eight million US dollars showed that many patients die under cold and painful circumstances. The study also shows that dying patients often fail to make their wishes known and when they do, encounter indifference by doctors to their request to be spared life- sustaining treatment. Care of dying patients in hospital (3) References |
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