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  Vol. 280 No. 7, August 19, 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Facing Requests for Physician-Assisted Suicide

Toward a Practical and Principled Clinical Skill Set

Linda L. Emanuel, MD, PhD

JAMA. 1998;280:643-647.

Requests for physician-assisted suicide are not a new phenomenon, and many physicians are likely to face this challenging situation. This article proposes for professionals an 8-step approach to respond to requests for physician-assisted suicide. The approach seeks to identify and treat the root causes of the request and aims to present a plan for consistent application of a set of clinical skills. Justification for the steps requires only 2 noncontentious principles: the patient should be free of unwanted intervention, and the physician is obligated to provide suffering patients with comfort care. Care based on these 2 principles alone does not include physician-assisted suicide. The approach does, however, justify patient refusal of oral intake in specific circumstances. The approach could resolve a majority of requests for physician-assisted suicide and should be tested further for clinical efficacy.


From the Institute for Ethics, American Medical Association, Chicago, Ill.


RELATED LETTER

Responding to Patient Requests for Physician-Assisted Suicide
Anthony Back, Linda Ganzini, Mark Sullivan, Paul Menzel, Dean Rieger, and Linda Emanuel
JAMA. 1999;281(3):227-229.
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