打开APP
userphoto
未登录

开通VIP,畅享免费电子书等14项超值服

开通VIP
Euthanasia debate refuses to die in China

2015-01-27 09:10 Xinhua Web Editor: Gu Liping
0

The undated photo shows Xiong Zhengqing (R) and his wife carry their son who has been unable to breath on his own. [Photo: jxnews.com.cn]

A couple in eastern China's Anhui Province is pleading for the right to allow their ailing son to die.

The 16-month-old boy suffered severe brain damage in December when he got stuck on a conveyer belt in his father's factory. Discharged from hospital in January, he cannot move, talk or breathe on his own. Every three hours, his mother must inject milk into his stomach tube to feed him. Doctors say his chances of recovery are almost nonexistent.

"We cannot bear to watch our son starving to death," said his father. The couple asked doctors and the civil affairs bureau of Huoqiu County if they could end the boy's suffering, but were firmly rejected. Euthanasia is illegal in China.

The story has reignited the debate over euthanasia in China, because sadly, the case is not exceptional.

In 2007, a 29-year-old woman named Li Yan attracted nationwide attention by posting a short article on her blog. Living with motor-neurone disease for almost her whole life, she can only move her head and some fingers. "I love my life, but I would rather die if I cannot live with dignity," she wrote.

Her parents act as her cooks, nurses and carers. "I am their burden," Li wrote. "They are getting old and I cannot imagine what life will be like when they are gone."

Supporters say mercy killing saves people from unnecessary suffering pain, and people should be allowed to choose their own fate.

Pan Jing, a doctor with the Cancer Hospital of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, believes legalization of euthanasia is both necessary and urgent.

"In 30 years working in this hospital, I have seen how miserable patients are when there is no cure for their illnesses," she said. "I have seen unconscionable suffering, hopelessness and lingering pain which can only be ended by death"

Pan says that around a quarter of her patients expressed the wish to die painlessly and with dignity. "I feel sorry for them, of course, but there is nothing I can do to help."

Opponents of euthanasia consider it an infringement of people's right to life, claiming that it is a complicated issue involving factors such as jurisprudence, ethics and medical technology, and is difficult to handle in practice.

"The right of life is paramount," said Wei Ansong, a lawyer. "Nobody can end one's life but oneself."

It is hard to judge whether the patients are making free choices based on their own will. Wang Kaiyu of the Anhui Academy of Social Sciences, told Xinhua that he considers China as neither prepared nor mature enough to legalize the practice.

One precondition of allowing patients to choose to die is that their families, medical institutions and government departments have all fully carried out their responsibilities to save the patient's life, he said.

"A developing country with a large, often poorly educated, rural population, China has a social security system and medical services that need improving. It would be wrong to replace one tragedy with another. Choosing mercy killing due to lack of funds for treatment would be just such a tragedy," Wang said.

Very few countries currently allow euthanasia--the Netherlands, Belgium, and Switzerland, for example. All countries which could fairly be described as very highly developed.

Moral, ethical and legal debate on this complicated, heartrending issue continues, with no end in sight.

本站仅提供存储服务,所有内容均由用户发布,如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击举报
打开APP,阅读全文并永久保存 查看更多类似文章
猜你喜欢
类似文章
【热】打开小程序,算一算2024你的财运
euthanasia
法国允许辅助自杀 或实现安乐死合法化
瑜伽可以帮助人们恢复健康(二)
你希望怎样死去?
当医生自己面对癌症和死亡
考研英语阅读理解思路透析和真题揭秘(70)
更多类似文章 >>
生活服务
热点新闻
分享 收藏 导长图 关注 下载文章
绑定账号成功
后续可登录账号畅享VIP特权!
如果VIP功能使用有故障,
可点击这里联系客服!

联系客服