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Diana Pretty Case

Diana Pretty Case. Nunu Poe PHIL 1722 Section- 60. Diana Pretty. From England Not allow assisted suicide in England Have family Was rejected from both England and European Human Right . Motor Neuron Disease. MND ( Information ) Progressive Disease Over 40 yrs old, between 50-70

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Diana Pretty Case

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  1. Diana Pretty Case Nunu Poe PHIL 1722 Section- 60

  2. Diana Pretty • From England • Not allow assisted suicide in England • Have family • Was rejected from both England and European Human Right

  3. Motor Neuron Disease MND ( Information ) Progressive Disease Over 40 yrs old, between 50-70 Men & Women 1:2 1 or 2 per 100,000 diagnosed each year in U.K Symptoms Muscle weakness Later, difficulty with mouth, throat, neck Treatment Cannot prevent from developing

  4. Continue….. Up to 5,000 people in Britain have MND It stops the brain sending messages to muscles, which waste More people die of MND than Aids Most sufferers stay mentally alert It's not contagious

  5. What she was willing… • Diagnosed in 1999 (43 yrs old) • In 2000, wrote to Tony Blair to change law • In 2001, Ask public prosecution for husband can help her • October, 2001, England high court reject, November, confirm by law lord Bingham • March, 2002, European court; 12 hrs with ambulance • April, 2002, European human right court rejected • Died in 2002 at hospice

  6. Sadly,Lost her right to end of her life in England European human right court also rejected her appeal

  7. Main Parties • Dianna Pretty • Brian Pretty( husband) • Tony Blair ( Prime Minister) • David Calvert Smith ( Public prosecution, England) • Lord justice Tuckey ( High court, England) • Lord Bingham (Law Lord, England) • European Human Right Court

  8. Ethical Issue • Terminal illness • Patient agreed voluntarily • Her husband wanted to help • Why could not justice let her die? • Who needed to agree for that? • Does someone have a right to help dying? • Should Mercy killing or Assisted suicide be allowed?

  9. Health Care Principles that are violated • Autonomy • Justice

  10. Autonomy: Self-determination; right of patient to participate in ….. • Patient felt lose her right • Even it was voluntary, lost decision

  11. Justice: Deals with fairness, deserts, and distribution of good and services ….. • Diane Pretty speaks through her husband Brian: "I feel I have no rights“ • Justice is not for individual emotion, but it can be distributed. • Netherland, Belgium, Switzerland

  12. Utilitarian: Consequence based ethicist believeGood reside in the promotion of happiness or the greatest net increase of pleasure over pain • Could not win to die so that she could not die with dignity • Utilitarian ethic did not apply in this case • If physicians or laws helped her that would have been an utilitarian solution.

  13. Kantian: Duty based ethical believeIt would be wrong or right because it does not depend on situation or consequences • England high court and European human right decide as a duty-oriented • 76 native British go to Switzerland for assisted suicide with non-physician although England practice Kantian ethic

  14. Analysis of Assisted Suicide • Proponent • Need to change law • Both in political and health care • Terminal ill people will satisfy • Can spend money for others area( research, organ transplant) Opponent Does not need to change law Conservative people will be happy Need more hospice care and palliative care Keep society maintain stable

  15. Continue….. • I would choose an utilitarian theory • Good for patient and family not only financial but also benefit to others proponents’ claims • Some terminal ill patients will be happy to claim to die with dignity • Autonomy and human rights will be validated

  16. Continue… • Cannot harm to physician role, just allowed to family members can involve in assisted suicide • Everyone should have a right to assistance for dying, if patient will not recover • Should allow assisted suicide: not mercy killing!! • No one should not have a benefit with her death!!!

  17. References • Edge, R S, & Groves, J R. (2006). Ethic of health care. NY: Delmar. Print. • Humphrys, John. "End-of-Life Decisions Are Personal and Should Be Respected." The Right to Die. Ed. John Woodward. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, 2010. At Issue. Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 15 Apr. 2011. • http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/beds/bucks/herts/6647419.stm • "Supporter of Death with Dignity." Gale Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Detroit: Gale, 2010. Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 15 Apr. 2011.

  18. Thank You,

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