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    Amendment allows terminally ill to forgo life support

    By Crystal Hsu
    STAFF REPORTER
    Saturday, Nov 23, 2002, Page 2

    Doctors legally remove life-supporting devices from terminally-ill patients who choose to die in a more dignified manner after a legal revision was passed by the legislature yesterday.

    The legislation, sponsored by KMT Legislator Chiang Yi-wen (¦¿ºö¶²), conditionally frees medical professionals from extending the lives of terminally sick patients with life-support devices.

    Patients their family members have said that emergency measures serve only to lengthen the suffering of patients who have no chance of recovery.

    "To save dying patients continues to pose a moral dilemma for doctors and patients alike despite the introduction of a natural death law two years ago. The legal revision, I hope, can reduce medical disputes in connection with such predicaments," Chiang said

    Under amendment, doctors may pull the plug after patients or their family members express their intentions in a written statement. The patients must be certified as "terminally ill" by at least two doctors.

    Chiang the amended law can both help save medical resources and ease the pain of terminally ill patients before they die.

    "The purpose of medicine is to cure patients, not hurt them," she said. "That being so, their wishes not to suffer further but die in a more dignified manner should be respected."

    DPP Lai Ching-te (¿à²M¼w) said because doctors are obligated to do whatever they can to extend the lives of their patients, doctors often see their patients going through needless suffering before their deaths.

    TSU Chien-lin Whei-chun (¿úªL¼z§g) said US doctors will consult with terminally ill patients before administering life-saving measures.

    She said it is time Taiwan also introduced the practice.

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