I was aggrieved to read the letter by Dr George Wong Seow Choon (“Time to talk about new laws on dying”; last Friday).
I lost my mother to cancer when I was 19 years old.
She and I were very close.
I was the
youngest child and was born with brittle bones.
My mother was not
equipped to care for a child with special needs but she gave me the gift
of life and her love.
Her ambition was for me to finish my
university studies, get a job and support myself.
She kept her illness
from me, as I was taking my A levels then.
The day before she died, she held my hands and looked at me as if she could not bear for me to go home.
Would my mother have wanted her life to
be shortened by doctors?
No; she wanted to live, and wanted to see her
ambition for me come true.
I went through unresolved grief for
over a decade because I was not aware of her illness and could not be
with her when she most needed me.
The fact that she died naturally helped
me in the grieving process.
I would have been further devastated had
any doctor intervened in this natural process of dying.
Any procedure to shorten anyone’s life, no matter the intention, is murder.
A doctor’s job is to heal, not kill.
Doctors who want to help patients end
their lives are overstepping the boundary, especially when patients and
family members may not be in a good physical, mental or financial state
to make a decision.
While it is painful to see our loved ones in pain, we should not promote the culture of death as the solution.
How do we prevent the abuse of
euthanasia?
How do we assess the intentions of family members who
request assisted suicide for the dying?
Who speaks for the right to live
of those who are unconscious?
What the dying need is the love and
comfort of their family members, and the best medical care to enable
them to live with hope and dignity until they pass on.
http://www.straitstimes.com/forum/letters-in-print/dont-promote-death-as-the-solution
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