My husband wanted to put another point of view forward. He says that if he stopped me from doing my dialysis it should and would be considered murder wouldn't it? So therefore, why should he be charged for murder if I'm not going to be 'charged' (for want of a better word) with suicide? Maybe the issue is actually our reaction to the word suicide?
To the insurance question- my husband was told before he started, by a doctor, if he didn't want to do dialysis, it was not considered suicide and the insurance would pay out. It would be considered natural causes.
Quote from: glitter on May 13, 2009, 08:58:10 AM To the insurance question- my husband was told before he started, by a doctor, if he didn't want to do dialysis, it was not considered suicide and the insurance would pay out. It would be considered natural causes.This is a difficult topic...So the parents who didn't get their 11-yr-old daughter treatment for diabetes didn't help murder their child...they just let her die of natural causes? I think not doing dialysis is no different than refusing treatment for any life-threating condition. i do believe it is a form of suicide but then again I'm not sure I disagree with suicide under certain conditions - other than the Bible disagrees with it.
Stopping treatment and your body naturally dying is NOT the same thing as taking your life. No one should be made to suffer when their body is failing them. It is not fair to put people who have an illness and do not want to continue painful treatment in the same catagory as those who take their own life, when their body is perfectly healthy.