Advocates rally around Pa. assisted suicide case
A Philadelphia nurse has become the latest lightning rod in the nation’s long-running debate over assisted suicide.
Fifty-seven-year-old Barbara Mancini is accused of giving a bottle of morphine to her dying father, 93-year-old Joe Yourshaw of Schuylkill County.
While four states allow some types of assisted suicide, the majority outlaw the practice.
Advocates for end-of-life choices say Mancini’s criminal case will lead the terminally ill to avoid talking to loved ones about their wishes.
The group Compassion & Choices has criticized Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane for pursuing the case. Amid a gag order, Kane’s office isn’t commenting.
Medical ethicist Art Caplan says most assisted suicide cases “are motivated by love … or mercy.” But he believes it’s important to review them, because of the potential for abuse.
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