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Case:
Dr. Jack Kevorkian promoted physician-assisted suicide for suffering patients that wanted to end their lives.
Verdict:
Kevorkian was tried many times for assisting with suicides. He was charged in March 1999 and is currently in jail. However, Oregons 1994 Death with Dignity Act supported physician-assisted suicide in certain circumstances.
Case:
Tirhas was an illegal immigrant from Eritrea that was diagnosed terminally ill once cancer had spread to her lungs.
Verdict:
She was removed from a respirator in Dec. 2005, despite her familys disagreement with Texas Advance Directives Act that allows hospitals remove terminally ill individuals.
Case:
Like the prominent Terri Schiavo case in 2005, Nancy Beth Cruzan was left in a vegetative state after a car accident. Her family wanted the feeding tube removed and fought as far as the Supreme Court.
Verdict:
The court allowed her family to remove the feeding tube, and she died in Dec. 1990.
Case:
Many argue medical marijuana provides therapeutic treatment to individuals in substantial pain, particularly chemotherapy patients.
Verdict:
Medical marijuana is legal in 11 states, including Washington, Oregon and California.
Case:
Terri Schiavo suffered brain damage and became dependent on a feeding tube for 15 years. Her husband, Michael, wanted to remove the feeding tube and fought many legal battles with her parents.
Verdict:
The tube was removed March 2005 after a verdict by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Landmark ethical dilemmas in medicine
8mm
Ghosts of Tim Leary and Hunter Thompson
8mm
The court allowed unsubstantiated hearsay that was probably perjurious. George Felos used this case as his template and as far as an unbiased eye can see, helped Scott and Joan Schiavo "recall" the two pathetic bits of ancient hearsay that doomed Terri.
Nancy Cruzan's father committed suicide a few years later, I believe out of guilt for killing his daughter.