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Sandeep Jaur

Decent Essays

If you had the choice of choosing between living with an incurable disease, or death, ending your suffering, which would you choose? Both Sandeep Jauhar and Diane Coleman read an article about Brittany Maynard, who was suffering a rare brain tumor, moved to Oregon so she can legally take her own life with a prescription drug. They both showed some similarities, but stand on different opposition on the issue of assisted suicide. Sandeep Jauhar, a cardiologist wrote “When assisted suicide is not the answer”, published in 2014 online on CNN website. In his article he argues how patients are given no other option, and the only means of escape is death, when there’s hospice that can be offered to them. Diane Coleman, President and CEO of Not Dead …show more content…

He mostly targets his audience using pathos appeals, with his experience with a patient, but also provided proof to back up his opinion of hospice care. He describes his patient “…feeling short breath…” and “…pleaded with me to help her die…” With this in mind, he tried not to sympathize with her but she said “Back and forth, back and forth, to the hospital. I’d rather be dead.” Her experience with such illness provokes emotions of empathy to the reader. He mentions Death with Dignity Act that was passed in Oregon in 1997, providing numerical proof, “…more than 1,100 people have obtained life-ending prescriptions. About 750 have used them. The law does provide safeguards against clinically depressed or mentally incompetent patients getting lethal drugs to end their lives…” Revealing how a large amount of the people are taking advantage of this law, but provided an opposition to this idea, “However, I still believe that for most terminally ill patients, hospice care is a better option than assisted suicide” (Juahar). He backs this up, providing a solid logos appeal, “The number of American hospitals offering palliative care has nearly doubled since 2000, growing nearly 1,500 programs—the majority of hospitals. Perhaps the most surprising finding from these programs is that hospice patients live a month longer on average than similar patients who do not receive such care.” This finding supports …show more content…

Even though they share a bit similarities, on the care of the patient, and wanting them to be more informed of other options, they stand on different sides of the field. Sandeep writes, “As a doctor I would like assisted suicide to be safe and available, but rare.” He may have lost a few readers on this statement, but this opposed the view of Diane, “If assisted suicide is encouraged, it may well take choices away from patients”. But she doesn’t go into further detail about why, it’s vague and broad. Jauhar gives a strong logos appeal, but doesn’t provide information where the statistics came from, not knowing if it’s a reliable source. Coleman gives us a general idea of how this may harm patients, but she doesn’t provide an alternative, only speaking that there should

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