Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1904404 | Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2007 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Depression, often accompanied by suicidal behavior or recurring thoughts about suicide, is one of the most common psychic impairments in old age. Statistics in Austria tell us clearly: Suicidal candidates among the elderly are likely to succeed. Especially in men, suicide has become a significant cause of death. In an age where traditional family structures are beginning to fall apart, and where the elderly increasingly feel to be a “burden” to society, unable to find their place, we tend to look at suicide more and more as a voluntary and autonomous decision, thus rationalizing it as in: “This life I would not want to live either”. But is it permissible for physicians to consider a patient, who has acted suicidal, to be “not ill,” or to have acted “with good reason”? The present paper shall critically revisit the concept of “rational suicide.” What I hope to illuminate is the tension between medical care for, and autonomy of the patient that physicians have to negotiate in their work.
Keywords
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Ageing
Authors
G. Ruckenbauer, F. Yazdani, G. Ravaglia,