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Unpleasant, but nonetheless inevitable. Death: The is the termination of the biological functions that sustain a living organismbiologicallivingorganism.

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Presentation on theme: "Unpleasant, but nonetheless inevitable. Death: The is the termination of the biological functions that sustain a living organismbiologicallivingorganism."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unpleasant, but nonetheless inevitable

2 Death: The is the termination of the biological functions that sustain a living organismbiologicallivingorganism Caused by (ultimately) by lack of oxygen to the brain Can occur in various ways It is VERY difficult to have a “moment of death” Process Many organs, cells, systems must cease Biophysical/metabolic processes stop All results in oxygen deprivation to the brain Exception- SUDDEN death Catastrophic occurrence

3 Topic Terminology:  Murder: Ending the life of a person who wished to be alive  Kill: Lawfully or unlawfully ending the life of a person  Mercy Killing: Ending the life of a person without their explicit request in the belief that it is the only compassionate thing to do (this term is loosely used to describe all acts of euthanasia)  Suicide: Deliberately ending one's own life  Assisted Suicide: Providing someone else with the means, such as drugs or other agents, for them to take their own life (assisted suicide differs from euthanasia in that it is only assistance)

4 Continued:  Physician Assisted Suicide: A doctor providing the lethal drugs with which a dying person may end their life  Euthanasia: Helping yourself or someone else have a good death (euthanasia differs from assisted suicide in that it is actively participating - rather than assisting - a person end their life)  Types of Euthanasia:  Passive Euthanasia: Deliberately disconnecting life support equipment, or stopping any life-sustaining medical procedures, to permit the natural death of the patient ("passive" refers to an act that indirectly causes death)  Active Euthanasia: Deliberately taking action that directly end the life of a dying patient to avoid further suffering ("active" refers to an act that directly causes death)

5  Active Voluntary Euthanasia: A lethal injection by a doctor into a dying patient when the patient has consented to it  Active Non-voluntary Euthanasia: A lethal injection by a doctor into a dying patient when the patient's consent is unknown (usually a patient who is no longer able to communicate)  Active involuntary Euthanasia: A lethal injection by a doctor into a dying patient when the patient has refused (this is so-called "Nazi euthanasia")

6 Other Important Terminology:  Hospice: A program of care for a person in the last six months of life, providing pain management, symptom control, and family support (palliative care is the medical term for hospice)  Double Effect: Giving large amounts of opiate drugs to a patient to relieve pain while at the same time recognizing that these will hasten death  Slow Code: The deliberate slow response to a medical alert of heart or breathing stoppage which is designed to make resuscitation impossible (also known as "blue code")  Persistent Vegetative State: A severely brain-damaged person in a permanent coma from which they will not recover (the person is almost always on life- support systems)  Coma: Prolonged unconsciousness from which a patient may or may not recover


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