In his recent book Partnership with the Dying: Where Medicine and Ministry Should Meet, David H. Smith criticizes “institutional policies of silence” concerning controversial procedures—he is writing of terminal sedation and its conflation with physician-assisted suicide—that encourage “considerable clandestine and freelance conscientious objection.”
In his recent book Partnership with the Dying: Where Medicine and Ministry Should Meet, David H. Smith criticizes “institutional policies of silence” concerning controversial procedures—he is writing of terminal sedation and its conflation with physician-assisted suicide—that encourage “considerable clandestine and freelance conscientious objection.”