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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. The concept of euthanasia is one that prevents terminally ill patients from having to endure one more moment of an artificial existence. Being kept alive through the intervention of drugs and other invasive treatments goes against the very grain of what is known as one's quality of life. In order to have quality of life, the patient must be in such a frame of mind and body where life is a pleasure and not merely a perpetual struggle. A person who is suffering from a terminal illness inevitably experiences many things that affect the daily routine. It is not long before the patient is forced to depend upon others to do many of the menial tasks that once were a simple part of everyday life. As this occurs, patients encounter feelings of worthlessness and inadequacy, believing that they have become a burden to those around them. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCDetEu.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
In order to have quality of life, the patient must be in such a frame of mind and body where life is a pleasure and not merely a perpetual struggle.
A person who is suffering from a terminal illness inevitably experiences many things that affect the daily routine. It is not long before the patient is forced to
depend upon others to do many of the menial tasks that once were a simple part of everyday life. As this occurs, patients encounter feelings of worthlessness and inadequacy,
believing that they have become a burden to those around them. Bibliography lists 7 sources. TLCDetEu.rtf DETAILED OVERVIEW OF EUTHANASIA by Lori S.
Mohr-Corrigan (c) October 2001 paper properly! The concept of euthanasia is one that
prevents terminally ill patients from having to endure one more moment of an artificial existence. Being kept alive through the intervention of drugs and other invasive treatments goes against
the very grain of what is known as ones quality of life. In order to have quality of life, the patient must be in such a frame of mind
and body where life is a pleasure and not merely a perpetual struggle. A person who is suffering from a terminal illness inevitably experiences many things that affect the
daily routine. It is not long before the patient is forced to depend upon others to do many of the menial tasks that once were a simple part of
everyday life. As this occurs, patients encounter feelings of worthlessness and inadequacy, believing that they have become a burden to those around them (Kowalski 45).
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