출처 : | Vision TV, 10 p.m. |
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방송일자 : | |
키워드 : | 죽음(death) 캐나다 |
관련링크 : | http://www.visiontv.ca/shows/the-trouble-with-dying/ |
http://bioethics.com 사이트에서 생명윤리 관련 영화 소개부분에 게시된 자료입니다.
출처 내용
New Documentary Opens Conversation about Death
April 8, 2014
(The Globe and Mail) – “My name is Cindy Cowan. I have late-stage ovarian cancer and I would like to have the choice in how I end my life.” Those words are spoken early in The Trouble with Dying (Vision TV, 10 p.m.), a terrific, thought-provoking new documentary about assisted suicide. Vision calls it “hard-hitting.” It is also fair and moving and guaranteed to make you think and rethink your impressions about the issue.
http://www.visiontv.ca/shows/the-trouble-with-dying/
For over 20 years, Canadian citizens and courts have been engaged in a profound and divisive debate surrounding one of the most important moments in an individual’s life – the moment that it ends. In The Trouble with Dying, each side of the argument over the right to choose the time and manner of one’s death weigh in on both the dangers and benefits of medically assisted dying, and the many ethical considerations that the concept entails. Produced and released by Toronto’s Holgate Production House, the program offers an independent and thought-provoking take on an issue that has only begun to unfold on the national stage.
While the intersection of human rights, healthcare, and opposing ideologies is clear in the most public demonstrations on the subject, this one-hour documentary explores the very personal implications that it has on those living with chronic illnesses. Their words and experiences offer resonant support to the ongoing battle for the decriminalization of an act that many characterize as essentially humane and compassionate.
LISTEN to Goldhawk Fights Back on AM740 ZoomerRadio for a thought-provoking and informative interview with Dr. James Downar, a Critical Care and Palliative Care Staff Physician at the Toronto General Hospital and Co-chair of Dying With Dignity Canada‘s Advisory Council of Physicians about Canada’s current passionate and divisive debate over physician-assisted-death.
SCROLL DOWN TO WATCH THE FULL PROGRAM AND MORE.
WATCH: Wanda Morris, Exec. Dir. of Dying With Dignity, delivers a passionate talk on the realities of end-of-life choices at ideacity 2012.
READ: “New Documentary Opens Conversation About Death” – A review by The Globe and Mail’s John Doyle.
READ: “Canadians wrestle with agonizing questions about the end of life” by Catherine Thompson, Kitchener Waterloo Record
After being diagnosed with late stage ovarian cancer, Cindy
Cowan wants the right to choose how she is going to die.
Linda Jarrett has suffered from multiple sclerosis for over 15 years. She is investigating the options for ending her life, before her degenerative disease makes it impossible for her to act on her own.
Currently, medically assisted dying is illegal in Canada. And while some advocates, such as Dr. Richard MacDonald believe offering terminal patients help in ending their lives is the compassionate thing to do, opponents such as Professor Margaret Sommerville believe the medical system must uphold respect for all human life.
The issues surrounding the right-to-die debate are further coming to a head since Québec introduced legislation in 2013 that would allow for medically assisted dying in some cases.
Cindy and Linda examine the options available to them, confronting their own mortality in the process.
The program also highlights the very real legal dangers involved for the loved ones and caregivers of those suffering from various diseases. With a conviction for assisting in a patient or family member’s death carrying with it a potential 14-year prison sentence, an atmosphere of fear and secrecy has predictably arisen. However, as most advocates for legalization will tell you, the law hasn’t prevented cases of assisted dying occurring behind closed doors – it has only veiled its processes in an ambiguous and secretive language, making for a treacherous and altogether more dangerous environment than if the practice were legalized.
On the other side of the coin, The Trouble with
Dying also looks at the concerns of those who say the legalization
of medically assisted dying is a step down a slippery slope, and gives doctors a
frightening amount of power. With the issue continuing to generate debate, in
government and op-ed sections across the country, the complicated questions at
its heart will only become more prevalent in the months and years to come. This
documentary offers an intelligent and poignant introduction to a conversation
that is shaping Canada’s legal, political and medical landscapes, and invites
viewers to formulate or assess their own beliefs in the process.