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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses the ethical nature of allowing someone to languish in a persistent vegetative state (PVS). Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLC_PVS.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
procedures or treatments, without which the individuals body would begin to break down until reaching a persistent vegetative state (PVS). The ethics of purposefully keeping someone in this questionable
state has been the focus of much debate over the years where the definition of death is concerned, not the least of which revolves around the recent case of Terri
Schiavo. Sade (2006) discusses how the very nature of ethics is to abide by a written - or sometimes understood - code of conduct that speaks to moral duty and
obligation. Perhaps nowhere is this guiding principle more important than when it comes to the issue of PVS. At what point, therefore, is a life no longer worth
living? The general consensus to an otherwise interpretive question is that once an individuals quality of life is no longer present - that the person has relinquished every nuance
of an existence once lived - the individual becomes a mere shell of his or her previous self (Sade, 2006). Given the clinical definition of PVS - "the lack
of evidence of awareness of the self or the environment, of interaction with others, or of comprehension or expression of language" (Jennett, 2002, p. 355) - it is reasonable to
surmise how this description speaks of an individual who has lost his or her personhood. By contrast, however, is the very verbiage used to portray this wholly observational condition,
inasmuch as there is no correlation made between that diagnosis and what is happening with "specific structural pathology" (Jennett, 2002, p. 355). Moreover, PVS is often a temporary state
from which people ultimately recover, making the terminology "potentially misleading as it suggests irreversibility" (Jennett, 2002, p. 355). With the agonizing demise of
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