复旦研究生综合英语2(修订版)-Unit.ppt
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1、U8,Additional lnformation for the Teachers Reference,Text Active and Passive Euthanasia,Warm-up Activities,Further Reading,Writing Skills,Additional Work,Warm-up Activities,1.Try to give a definition of euthanasia.2.Brainstorm about the pros and cons of euthanasia.3.Collect references to this issue
2、and take down notes.4.Order information and work out your own opinion.,Warm-up 1.1,James Rachels was an American professor of moral philosophy and medical ethics who was particularly concerned with ethical issues.Born in Columbus,Georgia,he earned degrees at Mercer University and the University of C
3、alifornia before joining the University of Alabama,Birmingham Department of Philosophy faculty in 1977.The popularity of his groundbreaking textbook anthology Moral Problems(1971),which sold 100,000 copies,influenced American universities to move away from more traditional philosophically oriented u
4、ndergraduate moral philosophy courses toward more practical undergraduate courses in ethics.,AIFTTR1.1,Additional lnformation for the Teachers Reference,1.James Rachels(1941-2003),AIFTTR2.1,2.Euthanasia,Euthanasia is a practice of mercifully ending a persons life in order to release the person from
5、an incurable disease,intolerable suffering,or undignified death.The word euthanasia derives from the Greek for“good death”and originally referred to intentional mercy killing.Proponents of euthanasia believe that unnecessarily prolonging life in terminally ill patients causes suffering to the patien
6、ts and their family members.Many societies now permit passive euthanasia,which allows physicians to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment when directed to do so by the patient or an authorized representative.,AIFTTR2.2,Euthanasia differs from assisted suicide,in which a patient voluntarily
7、brings about his or her own death with the assistance of another person,typically a physician.In this case,the act is a suicide(intentional self-inflicted death),because the patient actually causes his or her own death.A.Related Laws As laws have evolved from their traditional religious underpinning
8、s,certain forms of euthanasia have been legally accepted.In general,laws attempt to draw a line between passive euthanasia(generally associated with allowing a person to die)and active euthanasia(generally associated with killing a person).While laws commonly permit passive euthanasia,active euthana
9、sia is typically prohibited.,AIFTTR2.3,Laws in the United States and Canada maintain the distinction between passive and active euthanasia.While active euthanasia is prohibited,courts in both countries have ruled that physicians should not be legally punished if they withhold or withdraw a life-sust
10、aining treatment at the request of a patient or the patients authorized representative.These decisions are based on increasing acceptance of the doctrine that patients possess a right to refuse treatment.Until the late 1970s,whether or not patients possessed a legal right of refusal was highly dispu
11、ted.One factor that may have contributed to growing acceptance of this right is the ability to keep individuals alive for long periods of time even when they are permanently unconscious or severely brain-damaged.Proponents jets,AIFTTR2.4,of legalized euthanasia believe that prolonging life through t
12、he use of modern technological advances,such as respirators and kidney machines,may cause unwarranted suffering to the patient and the family.As technology has advanced,the legal rights of the patient to forgo such technological intervention have expanded.Every U.S.state has adopted laws that author
13、ize legally competent individuals to make advanced directives,often referred to as living wills.Such documents allow individuals to control some features of the time and manner of their deaths.In particular,these directives empower and instruct doctors to withhold life-support systems if the individ
14、uals become terminally ill.Furthermore,the federal Patient Self-Determination Act,which became effective in 1991,requires federally certified health-care bet,AIFTTR2.5,facilities to notify competent adult patients of their right to accept or refuse medical treatment.The facilities must also inform s
15、uch patients of their rights under the applicable state law to formulate an advanced directive.Patients in Canada have similar rights to refuse life-sustaining treatments and formulate advanced directives.As of mid-1999,only one U.S.state,Oregon,had enacted a law allowing physicians to actively assi
16、st patients who wish to end their lives.However,Oregons law concerns assisted suicide rather than active euthanasia.It authorizes physicians to prescribe lethal amounts of medication that patients then administer themselves.In response to modern medical technology,physicians and lawmakers are slowly
17、 developing new professional and legal definitions of death.Additionally,experts are formulating rules to bat,AIFTTR2.6,implement these definitions in clinical situations,for example,when procuring organs for transplantation.The majority of states have accepted a definition of brain death the point
18、when certain parts of the brain cease to function as the time when it is legal to turn off a patients life-support system,with permission from the family.In 1995 the Northern Territory of Australia became the first jurisdiction to explicitly legalize voluntary active euthanasia.However,the federal p
19、arliament of Australia overturned the law in 1997.In 2001 The Netherlands became the first country to legalize active euthanasia and assisted suicide,formalizing medical practices that the government had tolerated for years.Under the Dutch law,euthanasia is justified(not legally punishable)if the mu
20、st,AIFTTR2.7,physician follows strict guidelines.Justified euthanasia occurs if(1)the patient makes a voluntary,informed,and stable request;(2)the patient is suffering unbearably with no prospect of improvement;(3)the physician consults with another physician,who in turn concurs with the decision to
21、 help the patient die;and(4)the physician performing the euthanasia procedure carefully reviews the patients condition.Officials estimate that about 2 percent of all deaths in The Netherlands each year occur as a result of euthanasia.B.Prevalence Although establishing the actual prevalence of active
22、 euthanasia is difficult,studies suggest that the practice is not common in the United States.In a study published in 1998 in the New England Journal of Medicine,only about 6 percent of basketball,physicians surveyed reported that they had helped a patient hasten his or her own death by administerin
23、g a lethal injection or prescribing a fatal dose of medication.(Eighteen percent of the responding physicians indicated that they had received requests for such assistance.)However,one-fifth of the physicians surveyed indicated that they would be willing to assist patients if it were legal to do so.
24、No comparable data are available for Canada.However,in 1998 the Canadian Medical Association(CMA)proposed that a study of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide be undertaken due to poor information on the subject.C.Ethical Concerns The issue of euthanasia raises ethical questions for physicians
25、and other health-care providers.The ethical code of physicians in the,AIFTTR2.8,AIFTTR2.9,United States has long been based in part on the Hippocratic Oath,which requires physicians to do no harm.However,medical ethics are refined over time as definitions of harm change.Prior to the 1970s,the right
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