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Prescription : Medicide - The Goodness of Planned Death - Jack Kevorkian

Prescription

Medicide - The Goodness of Planned Death

By: Jack Kevorkian

Hardcover | 1 September 1991 | Edition Number 1

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For many years Dr. Kevorkian was at the center of the red-hot debate over physician-assisted suicide. The inventor of the "suicide machine" stirred up both admiration and controversy. His "Deaths with Dignity" won him the accolades of the pro-choice movement. Other groups, like Operation Rescue, the AMA, the Hemlock Society, and especially the Michigan State Legislature, insisted that Kevorkian had gone too far. His much-publicized campaign to assist the terminally ill to commit suicide eventually led to his prosecution and imprisonment.

In Prescription: Medicide, the famed "suicide doctor" talks about why he was so committed to his struggle. He addresses the need to assist the terminally ill to die, how death row inmates should be allowed to donate organs after their deaths, and the need for medical reform to create a rational program of dignified, humane, beneficial planned death.
Industry Reviews
Kevorkian, gadfly of the medical profession and inventor of the "suicide machine," speaks his mind on the ethics of death. Its title notwithstanding, this is not primarily a discussion of euthanasia - or "medicide," the author's term for euthanasia performed by professional medical personnel - but, rather, largely a defense of his position that death-row inmates should be given the option of execution by general anaesthesia, thus permitting use of their bodies for experimentation and harvesting of their organs. Since his days as a medical resident, Kevorkian has attempted to convince legislators, prison officials, and physicians of the value of this approach. However, the art of persuasion is not Kevorkian's forte; indeed, he seems unable to resist attacking and insulting those who disagree with him, referring to his medical colleagues as "hypocritical oafs" with a "slipshod, knee-jerk" approach to ethics. Those seeking a thoughtful discussion of euthanasia will not find it here, but Kevorkian docs offer a revealing look at gruesome methods of execution. (Readers who have the stomach for it may be intrigued by his account of the many attempts to determine how long consciousness endures in severed heads.) Kevorkian concludes with a recounting of his development of the "Mercitron" (as he has named his suicide machine), his reasons for creating it, and his difficulties in promoting its use. A model bioethical code for medical exploitation of humans facing imminent and unavoidable death is included in the appendix. An angry doctor's rambling and repetitious harangue, certain to arouse the ire of the medical establishment. (Kirkus Reviews)

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