Who Decides? The Connecting Thread of Euthanasia, Eugenics, and Doctor-Assisted Suicide

  • Cheyfitz, Kirk
OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 40(1):p 5-16, April-2000 1999-2000. | DOI: 10.2190/DJFU-AAWP-M3L4-4ALP

Throughout recorded history, a series of seemingly unrelated ideas have been consistently intertwined: suicide, euthanasia, infanticide, eugenics, genocide and, most recently, the practice termed physician-assisted suicide. From Plato and Hippocrates to a pair of twentieth-century American physicians named Haiselden and Kevorkian, an examination of history shows these disparate notions always involve two troublesome questions: Which lives are not worth living? And who will decide? The same examination of history teaches that separating the worthy from the not worthy is a very dangerous proposition, especially for those whose lives are deemed marginal.

Copyright © 2000 Sage Publications