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Monday, November 19, 2018
Friday, November 16, 2018
Proposed Federal Palliative Care Act Is a Springing Euthanasia Bill

In 2012, an article in the New England Journal of Medicine reported that many doctors object to physician-assisted suicide.[1] The article's authors, Dr. Lisa Lehmann and Julian Prokopetz, argued back that assisted deaths need not be physician-assisted.[2] They said that a central government mechanism should provide the assistance instead:
We envision the development of a central state or federal mechanism to confirm the authenticity and eligibility of patients' requests, dispense medication [the lethal dose], and monitor demand and use.[3]
Monday, November 12, 2018
Man Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison for Counseling Suicide to Obtain Life Insurance
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| Justice Peter Davis |
“However, one can imagine many circumstances arising where people in positions of trust and responsibility could succumb to the temptation to counsel suicide for personal gain.”
By Hope Australia
These confronting words were spoken last week by Justice Davis in the Supreme Court of Queensland, as he sentenced Graham Robert Morant to 10 years imprisonment for counselling his wife to commit suicide.
Sunday, November 11, 2018
Virginia: Legislative Panel Punts on Assisted Suicide-Euthanasia Proposal
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| Del. Scott Garrett, MD |
By Katie O' Connor, Virginia Mercury
A group of lawmakers shot down proposals to allow medical-aid-in-dying, also known as physician-assisted suicide [and euthanasia], in Virginia on Wednesday in a review of a series of legislative recommendations on health care.
Del. Kaye Kory, D-Fairfax, requested that the Joint Commission on Health Care study the medical-aid-in-dying debate, in which a patient with less than six months to live obtains lethal drugs through a physician to end his or her life.
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