wrong with that?
Dying with dignity has little to do with whether it is a natural death or one precipitated by voluntary
euthanasia. Advocates of voluntary euthanasia are often heard declaiming that: “I wouldn’t let my cat suffer like that”
the inference being that just as they would have the cat ‘put down,’ so sick humans should be similarly treated. Treating
humans like animals hardly seems dignified. Moreover overseas experience shows that up to one in three recipients of
voluntary euthanasia suffers some unintended side-effect such as fits, vomiting or waking up again out of a drug-induced
coma. So voluntary euthanasia does not guarantee a hassle-free death.
Dignity is a combination of one’s own attitudes and behaviour towards others and the situation in which one finds oneself,
and the respect for the person that these engender. Disturbances of bodily function such as vomiting and incontinence
at the very end of life do not detract from the individual’s dignity. Indeed, the way a dying person handles such issues can
be totally inspiring. In any case modern therapy properly applied is capable of preventing the vast majority of such
symptoms. The attempts by pro-euthanasia advocates to paint every death as carrying a high probability of loss of dignity
are self-serving and totally without merit.