Asked what sustains her almost 10 years after being diagnosed with a brain tumour, Jodie Clarkson is clear-eyed.
This feature was first published in the May issue of Women's Health and has been updated to reflect recent events. The diary entry is dated 22/12/2004. ‘I just want her to die,’ reads my angry scrawl.
The concept of dying with dignity has become an important topic in modern healthcare, ethics, and personal decision-making. It addresses the rights, choices, and conditions under which individuals ...
More and more countries are legalising voluntary assisted dying. This lets a doctor, or sometimes a nurse practitioner, give life-ending medication to an eligible person who requests it. As of 2023, ...
I can totally relate to tiredness of life. Guess what? I saw a beautiful sunrise yesterday morning, acknowledged it, and couldn’t care less if I saw another one. Nina is a 72-year-old American woman ...
The Canadian Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Katie Engelhart wrote The Inevitable: Dispatches on the Right to Die. In this conversation with Reason's Kevin Alexander, Engelhart discusses why people ...
Our Blighty newsletter reported on how Britain’s assisted-dying bill is being held up in the House of Lords by just seven peers who have proposed hundreds of amendments. We asked readers what they ...
LONDON, Nov 28 (Reuters) - British lawmakers voted on Friday to proceed with legislation to legalise assisted dying for the terminally ill, in what would be the country's biggest social change in a ...
A society once strongly Roman Catholic has rejected the church’s prohibition on euthanasia, with many instead viewing control over one’s death as an individual right. A society once strongly Roman ...
Assisted dying is legal or partly legal in about a dozen countries, and more are considering allowing it. By Lynsey Chutel When lawmakers in Britain last week voted in favor of a proposal to legalize ...