Elsevier

Psychosomatics

Volume 36, Issue 5, September–October 1995, Pages 445-457
Psychosomatics

Review Article
Patient Requests for Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide in Terminal Illness: The Role of the Psychiatrist

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0033-3182(95)71625-5Get rights and content

Psychosocial assessment and treatment are critical elements of care for terminally ill patients who desire hastened death. Most patients, in saying that they want to die, are asking for assistance in living—for help in dealing with depression, anxiety about the future, grief, lack of control, dependence, physical suffering, and spiritual despair. In this article, the authors review current understandings of the psychiatric aspects of requests by terminally ill patients for assisted suicide and euthanasia; describe an approach to the common problems of physical, psychological, social, and spiritual suffering encountered in managing dying patients; and elaborate the functions of the psychiatrist in addressing these problems.

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