Rapid and dramatic developments in medicine and technology have completely given us the power to save more lives than was ever possible in the past. Medicines have put at our disposal the means to cure or to reduce the fatal suffering of people afflicted with diseases that were once fatal or painful. At the same time, medical technologies have given us the power to sustain the lifes (or, some would say, prolong the deaths) of patients whose physical and mental sustainability cannot be restored, whose horrible degenerating conditions cannot be reversed, and whose fatal pain cannot be eliminated. As medicines struggle to pull more and more people away from the hand of death, the plea that tortured, deteriorated lives be mercifully …show more content…
Medicine were created in order to save people from the edge of death instead of pushing people out of the way of live. Therefore, regarding to Hippocratic oath and the original use of medicine, assisted suicide should not be allowed. California passed assisted suicide law recently. California is the largest state so far that legalized assisted-suicide law whihc potentially present challenges other states have not experienced. According to Dena Davis, chair of the health department and professor of bioethics at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA, “California is the first really big state, so we'll get to watch how this unfolds now, and it might be a game changer. You are going to have a very large state with enormous diversity, a very religiously, ethnically, and economically diverse bunch of people, and it will be interesting to see what happens.” Terminal patients might have a certain right to choose to end their life, however, there is always a difference between ‘assisted suicide’ and having a doctor intentionally end a person’s