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Bioethics Forum Essay
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Should Life-Saving Medicine Be Continued for an Unhoused Patient with an Addiction?

Ms. B is a 45-year-old African American woman who lives in a shelter. She also has a heroin addiction and has end-stage heart failure. She was admitted to the hospital...
Read Should Life-Saving Medicine Be Continued for an Unhoused Patient with an Addiction?
Bioethics Forum Essay

A Responsible Death

As debates continue about the decisions people make about how to die, I wish to draw wider attention to the death of Paul Drier. There was little extraordinary about his death. He was a widower, had suffered from multiple health problems, and had been on kidney dialysis for 18 months. Considered to be too ill to qualify for a transplant, he decided to end dialysis. Two aspects of Mr. Drier’s death seem worth putting on record for bioethicists to remember.
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Bioethics Forum Essay
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Is Medical Aid in Dying a Human Right? Another View

An essay for Bioethics Forum earlier this month concludes that medical aid in dying is not a human right. But we should have a right to decide what suffering we are willing to endure and receive medical assistance necessary to avoid the suffering we want to avoid.
Read Is Medical Aid in Dying a Human Right? Another View
Bioethics Forum Essay

Live-Tweeting About Dying: Last Lessons from Kathy Brandt

Kathy Brandt, a leader in the hospice and palliative care movement in the United States, died on August 4. She was 53 and had been diagnosed with a rare, highly aggressive form of ovarian cancer in January. Brandt and her wife regularly posted on social media about their family's end-of-life experiences.
Read Live-Tweeting About Dying: Last Lessons from Kathy Brandt
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