Dignity and Death in Dying

Cards (11)

  • Dignity
    The quality of being worthy of respect or honor. Treating oneself and others with respect, recognizing the inherent value and worth of each individual, regardless of their circumstances, background, or differences.
  • Death with Dignity
    Terminally ill person has the ability to choose when, where, and how they will die. Allows the patient to articulate their end-of-life decisions to loved ones and healthcare professionals. Provides people the ability to end their life before illness overcomes them with pain or conditions that make them feel they have lost control.
  • Life-prolonging procedure
    Medical treatment used to keep a person alive for a longer period of time, but does not cure the underlying medical condition.
  • Life-sustaining treatment

    Treatment needed to prolong a person's life, such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation, artificial hydration and nutrition, artificial ventilation, and in some circumstances, antibiotics and blood transfusions.
  • Inviolability of human life
    Human life should not be unlawfully taken, harmed, or treated as expendable. Respect for life in all its stages, from conception to natural death, and extends to all individuals regardless of their age, health, abilities, or circumstances. Life should be preserved at all costs.
  • Euthanasia
    The act of intentionally ending a person's life to relieve suffering or pain, typically due to a terminal illness or unbearable suffering that cannot be alleviated.
  • Methods of Euthanasia
    • Lethal Injection
    • Voluntary Stoppage of Eating and Drinking (VSED)
    • Assisted Suicide
    • Euthanasia by Proxy
  • Active Euthanasia
    Death is brought about by a deliberate action, such as administering a lethal dose of medication or performing a medical procedure with the explicit intention of causing the patient's death.
  • Passive Euthanasia
    Death is allowed to occur by withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining treatment or medical interventions. It involves refraining from taking action to prolong the patient's life.
  • Suicide
    The act of intentionally ending one's own life, typically as a result of various factors, including mental illness, emotional distress, or unbearable physical suffering.
  • Assisted Suicide

    Providing assistance or means to a terminally ill or suffering individual to end their own life, such as providing medication or other means for the individual to self-administer to hasten death.