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Search resuls for: "Clancy Martin"


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Many people who want to end their lives because of intense mental suffering find themselves grateful for their lives once the suicidal moment or attempt has passed. But it is because of my intimacy with suicide that I believe people must have this right. It’s true that policymakers, psychiatrists and medical ethicists must treat requests for euthanasia on psychiatric grounds with particular care, because we don’t understand mental illness as well as we do physical illness. Canada’s MAID law recognizes that people suffering from extreme depression, for example, may find no other means to end their agony. A panel of experts has recommended safeguards and protocols for requests for aid in dying made by people with mental illness.
We Need to Talk About Suicide
  + stars: | 2023-04-01 | by ( Clancy Martin | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
In 2011, I was in the psychiatric hospital because I’d tried to kill myself for the third time that dark year. I wouldn’t be released unless my psychiatrist believed I was no longer at risk for “harming myself,” the common euphemism for a suicide attempt. Even in this context, I didn’t feel I could speak openly and frankly about my contemplation of suicide. For centuries in the West, and still in many nations today, suicide was considered among the vilest of sins and most heinous of crimes. The World Health Organization lists “stigma and taboo” first in its obstacles to making progress in preventing suicide.
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