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Burdening Others

Hastings Center Report 52 (5):15-23 (2022)

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  1. Beyond coercion: reframing the influencing other in medically assisted death.Mara Buchbinder & Noah Berens - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    This essay considers how we are to understand the decision to end one’s life under medical aid-in-dying (MAID) statutes and the role of influencing others. Bioethical concerns about the potential for abuse in MAID have focused predominantly on the risk of coercion and other forms of undue influence. Most bioethical analyses of relational influences in MAID have been made by opponents of MAID, who argue that MAID is unethical, in part, because it cannot cleanly accommodate relational influences. In contrast, proponents (...)
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  • Hard Choices: How Does Injustice Affect the Ethics of Medical Aid in Dying?Brent M. Kious - 2024 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 33 (3):413-424.
    Critics of medical aid in dying (MAID) often argue that it is impermissible because background social conditions are insufficiently good for some persons who would utilize it. I provide a critical evaluation of this view. I suggest that receiving MAID is a sort of “hard choice,” in that death is prima facie bad for the individual and only promotes that person’s interests in special circumstances. Those raising this objection to MAID are, I argue, concerned primarily about the effects of injustice (...)
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