Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Petrow"


3 mentions found


Should terminally ill people be able to choose how they die? But for many Americans in similar circumstances, this is not an option. In this audio essay, the writer Steven Petrow shares the story of his sister’s last day and why MAID should be a right for everyone. Read Steven’s guest essay on Julie’s decision here. (A full transcript of this audio essay will be available by Monday.)
Persons: Julie Petrow, Cohen, , Steven Petrow, Read
To the Editor:Re “I Promised My Sister I Would Write About How She Chose to Die,” by Steven Petrow (Opinion guest essay, Jan. 7):I admired Mr. Petrow’s account of losing his sister to cancer and her plan for her own death. As a culture, we still struggle in coming to terms with the personal suffering of advanced illness and the decision to take whatever control we can of our own lives and deaths. Jean was living in Tennessee when she finally shared the news, and she came to Vermont for assistance in dying by her own choice. That allowed us to join her there and say goodbye, while honoring her wish to avoid “having a bunch of people bending over my bed and gushing.”The support she found through hospice nurses and staff eased her last days. She also showed the kind of strength that Mr. Petrow found in his sister.
Persons: , Steven Petrow, Jan, Jean, Petrow Locations: Tennessee, Vermont
Side by side, on a quiet street on a mountain ridge high up above Salt Lake City, sit two homes that are at once similar and yet completely different. “It’s the culmination of a whole lifetime,” says Cynthia Strike Petrow about the two homes.Ms. Petrow, a 68-year-old musician and Pilates teacher, grew up in the traditional house, which she still owns with her three siblings. It serves as a gathering space for holidays for the extended family.
Total: 3