There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctors to prescribe lethal drugs to assist terminally ill patients to commit suicide. Here, Sir Graeme Catto argues that terminally ill mentally competent adults should be able to choose the time and place of their death. Opposing him, Baroness Ilora Finlay argues that both the Assisted Suicide (Scotland) Bill and Lord Falconer’s private member’s bill in the House of Lords endanger patients’ safety and require doctors to assess patients against criteria that cannot be verified
What if you were told your last days would be spent in suffering and pain? Should you be able to avo...
It is time that Parliament took the brave and audacious move to publically debate legalising assiste...
This chapter will argue that the core justification for the United Kingdom’s ‘blanket ban’ on assist...
There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctor...
There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctor...
There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctor...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sweet & Maxwell via htt...
2010 has been an eventful year in the life of the debate about assisted dying. In February, the Dire...
Assisted dying in the UK is a controversial topic, this is due to a massive peak in public and medic...
On the 25th June 2014 the Supreme Court gave its decision in the case of applications for judicial r...
End-of-life issues are at the forefront of moral and political debate as medical technology advances...
The key to the debate on assisted suicide is to differentiate between legal rights and their impleme...
this article looks at assisted suicide in the light of the UK government's suicide prevention strate...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...
What if you were told your last days would be spent in suffering and pain? Should you be able to avo...
It is time that Parliament took the brave and audacious move to publically debate legalising assiste...
This chapter will argue that the core justification for the United Kingdom’s ‘blanket ban’ on assist...
There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctor...
There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctor...
There is much debate in the UK and abroad around whether the law should be changed to license doctor...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sweet & Maxwell via htt...
2010 has been an eventful year in the life of the debate about assisted dying. In February, the Dire...
Assisted dying in the UK is a controversial topic, this is due to a massive peak in public and medic...
On the 25th June 2014 the Supreme Court gave its decision in the case of applications for judicial r...
End-of-life issues are at the forefront of moral and political debate as medical technology advances...
The key to the debate on assisted suicide is to differentiate between legal rights and their impleme...
this article looks at assisted suicide in the light of the UK government's suicide prevention strate...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...
What if you were told your last days would be spent in suffering and pain? Should you be able to avo...
It is time that Parliament took the brave and audacious move to publically debate legalising assiste...
This chapter will argue that the core justification for the United Kingdom’s ‘blanket ban’ on assist...