I, Sydney Fikse, of sound mind delegate my sister, Carlie Fikse, as my agent if I enter a state where I am unable to make decision for myself. If my agent is unwilling or unable to serve as my agent, I appoint Whitney Johnson. I trust these two to make decision regarding my health and safety. I giver her permission to consent to or refuse any medical, surgical, or hospital health care I may need. This power of attorney is applicable is the case that I am unable to speak or soundly make decisions for myself. Here are some wishes I have in a medical crisis.
1. If I am diagnosed with a terminal disease, I do not wish to live in a state that is prolonged with the use of life support. 2. If it is evident that I am with child, I would like
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If I with stand permanent and serve brain damage, I do not wish to receive life-support treatment. 5. I do not require that there be a friend or family member in my hospital room at all times. I would prefer them to continue to live their lives despite my current condition. 6. I give consent to harvest any organs that could be used in a transplant to help another patient if doctor’s have concluded that I am most likely not going to recover.
My license indicates that I have signed and agreed to organ donation with the state of South Dakota in the event of a medical crisis.
I give my agent full power to consent to or refuse any medical treatment advised.
Sydney Fikse
April 19, 2017
2:30 PM
The values that prompted my decisions had to do with quality of life for me and my friends and family and the ability to save another life. I do not want to continue to live a life in which I am bed-ridden and do not have the ability to breathe and live on my own. The book says, “ in many cultures, comes in its own time,“ (Burkhardt & Nathaniel, 2015, p. 264). Just as the quote says, it is my time to pass along and even as I think about it now I can accept that. I also don’t want my friends and family to dedicate their time to my recovery or vegetative state. There is nothing they could do to help me recover from whatever illness is keeping me in the hospital. I would feel better knowing they are continuing to live their lives. The other value I based my decisions
In the state of Maryland on July 29th, 1986 Kirk Noble Bloodsworth was brought to trial. The crimes that were said to be committed were; first degree murder, first degree rape, and first degree sexual offense. The defendants in the case were the following; Julia Doyle Bernhardt and George E. Burns, Jr., Asst. Public Defenders (Alan H. Murrell, Public Defender, on brief), Baltimore, for appellant. Valerie V. Cloutier, Asst.
munity; if she could be a witch, then anyone could. Magistrates even questioned Sarah Good's 4-year-old daughter, Dorothy, and her timid answers were construed as a confession. The questioning got more serious in April when Deputy Governor Thomas Danforth and his assistants attended the hearings. Dozens of people from Salem and other Massachusetts villages were brought in for questioning.
As this was a document drafted and signed by the patient when she was in sound mental condition, the contents of it should be respected, even with regard to this situation. The husband has stated that the patient never intended for the living
Position When the health care provider decide that the patient will not improve and there are no brain activities. Since her husband and her father are there, the hospital should listen to them to suspend the life support. But in this case husband want to discontinue the treatment, father want to continue the treatment, doctor does not have hope and they do not know what patient would want. In this situation, this case should be referred to the court. Court should make the decision protecting patient right, understanding their relative feelings, hospital ethical committee with doctors’ advice.
Terminally ill patients lose control over so many aspects of their lives, in many ways physician-assisted death gives them back some of the control they lost. Illness is not discriminatory. Therefore, people of all ages and backgrounds are diagnosed with things like cancer, kidney failure, and heart disease every day. Also, for anyone who is unfortunate enough to be diagnosed with any terminal illness, it can feel like their disease controls every aspect of their lives and they have no choice in the matter. Authors for the Journal of the American Society on Aging Lee Combs and Grube describe how persistent pain took control of a young woman named Brittany Maynard’s life, “Even after undergoing a sophisticated surgery and numerous cancer treatments,
Make and keep your major health decisions with advance health care directives. While they vary by state, advance directives can carry significant importance, especially as one gets older and increasingly concerned with health care and end-of-life decisions. Typically, two basic advance directives can cover a patient’s needs: the durable power of attorney for health care and the living will. Both serve the purpose of empowering the individual concerning personal health care in the case of incapacitation by illness or injury.
Many times in life we are faced with difficult decisions, but is it you who are making the decisions, or is someone else making the decision for you? When it comes to ending a person’s life, because of a terminal illness, it should be the patient’s decision. Physician-Assisted Suicide or PSA has been an issue for many decades, questioning its morality, and the legal issues it could face if legalized. The history of self-assisted suicide dates back to the Roman and Greeks, where scholars approved of the decision to hasten death due to illness.
In other ways, medical ethics does not involve the life of a patient to be preserved in all circumstances at all costs. Discussion Almost all states have statutes supporting the right of adult patients to refuse care and to provide
This is a part of the stage where finding recovery and answers challenge doctors and the loved ones that are suffering. In the Institute of Medicine’s critical report Dying in America, there is an idea that emphasizes the importance of making a decision for the patient that is on the stage of death. JoAnn Grif, writer of Dying in America, identifies that decisions for a patient should be made before as a living will from the patient’s own preference and decision. Letting the doctor know so it can improve communication and awareness for the individual that is on treatment, and this consent should ahead of time and planned out. Although, how soon should patients reveal a will to their doctor, some will ask.
During the previous decades, society’s behavior with regard to organ donation remains reluctant. A survey showed that although people plainly accept to offer their organs for transplantation, when a person dies, his or her relatives often refuse donation. To be able
The appellant, Sue Rodriguez, suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Under this condition, Sue will lose the ability to swallow, speak, walk, and move her body without assistance. As a result, she will eventually become confined to a bed. With a life expectancy between 2 and 14 months, Sue wishes to end her life on her own will when her condition becomes too painful to bear. This can be accomplished with the assistance of a qualified physician.
We both think it is important so, we do not have to guess at what the other person would want in determining our health care and wishes. 2.) Why do you think that so many people “wait until it is too late” to begin this process? I believe that many people do wait until it is too late to begin the process of their wishes pertaining to their health.
Who is anyone to take the right of life from someone, just because you are being selfish and have no beneficial use for your organs, when someone is dying because they need an organ of yours? I have to agree, that if organ donations did become legal, it would change the underlying meaning of organ donations, it wouldn’t be because you truly want to help people. But even if you don’t have a choice, you would still be saving someone’s life, which is heroic. We should have compassion for people, because we never know if that could be us one
Imagine being unable to walk, unable to speak, unable to move and unable to breathe. Imagine being in a state of complete paralysis where the only thing that keeps on functioning is your brain, and you live chained to a machine doctors call life support. Imagine being told that you have an incurable disease that will inevitably kill you. Maybe next month. Maybe next year.
There can be no right or wrong answering this. There is a policy known as the Dead donor rule that raises a lot of ethical questions. Medical professionals must weight the value of saving a life with the individual rights with their body. However, with this rule the person must be declared dead before a doctor can harvest the organs. My debates lie in when is dead dead.