Terminal dehydration

Terminal dehydration is dehydration to the point of death. Some scholars make a distinction between "terminal dehydration" and "termination by dehydration".[1] Courts in the United States[2] generally do not recognize prisoners as having a right to die by voluntary dehydration, since they view it as suicide.[2][3]

  1. ^ JK Hall (2005), "After Schiavo: Next issue for nursing ethics", JONA's Healthcare Law, Ethics and Regulation, 7 (3): 94–98, doi:10.1097/00128488-200507000-00009, PMID 16148577, S2CID 45362001
  2. ^ a b NL Cantor (1987). Legal frontiers of death and dying. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-33290-7, pp. 28-29.
  3. ^ NL Cantor (2006), On Hastening Death Without Violating Legal or Moral Prohibitions, LoY. U. CHI. LJ

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