TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,831
I had an interesting thought that just came to mind with respect to the legalization of voluntary euthanasia, assisted-suicide, euthanasia, death with dignity, and right to die laws. I am thinking that from an economical standpoint, perhaps assisted suicide, and other measures (sometimes even passive euthanasia) is forbidden, outlawed, banned, illegal in many states in the US (and many other countries around the world) is simply because of money (along with other reasons and causes). In the current medical system, hospitals and the medical-industrial complex has more to gain for keeping a patient alive and continuously treating said patient's illness rather than permanently curing it or finding a permanent solution. It also fuels big-pharma and what not (but that's another story for another time).
Therefore, putting aside the other reasons (religion, ethics, and humanism), suppose if someday, or in such circumstances where the process and procedure of euthanasia is more profitable in the US rather than hospice, long term care, and/or being alive, would there be a shift in laws and/or more doctors allowing patients a legal, dignified exit? In other words, let's say that in 20-30 years, that the current system of the medical industry (medication and treatment over cure) is unsustainable and that it is more profitable for someone to die than to be treated, would more legislation be geared towards allowing/legalizing euthanasia and death with dignity, versus just keeping someone alive until their natural end?
This is of course putting aside other factors and reasons and just focusing on the economic aspect of this. I know that not all countries have a profit motive, so this is leaning more towards the US, where healthcare is still heavily privatized and for profit along with capitalistic incentives.
Therefore, putting aside the other reasons (religion, ethics, and humanism), suppose if someday, or in such circumstances where the process and procedure of euthanasia is more profitable in the US rather than hospice, long term care, and/or being alive, would there be a shift in laws and/or more doctors allowing patients a legal, dignified exit? In other words, let's say that in 20-30 years, that the current system of the medical industry (medication and treatment over cure) is unsustainable and that it is more profitable for someone to die than to be treated, would more legislation be geared towards allowing/legalizing euthanasia and death with dignity, versus just keeping someone alive until their natural end?
This is of course putting aside other factors and reasons and just focusing on the economic aspect of this. I know that not all countries have a profit motive, so this is leaning more towards the US, where healthcare is still heavily privatized and for profit along with capitalistic incentives.
Last edited: