Department of General Practice and Rural Health, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand; School of Health, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Department of General Practice and Rural Health, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 Dec;291:114501. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114501. Epub 2021 Oct 21.
Individual agency is central to late modern and neoliberal concepts of the self and notions of a good death. Assisted dying can be understood as a reflection of these ideas in that control over death resides with the individual. The aim of this article is to explore individual agency and control and employ concepts of biopower and freedom to illustrate the paradoxes inherent within assisted dying. Assisted dying is currently of wide interest due to legislative change. At the time of research, the New Zealand Parliament was passing the End of Life Choice Act, yet there had been no research with people approaching the end of life about assisted dying. Through the media we recruited and interviewed 14 people approaching the end of life who would have considered choosing assisted dying if it were available to them. Interviews were analyzed using an immersion/crystallization thematic analysis. Assisted dying appealed to participants because it offered control. This article examines the discursive context of control as well as the participants' perception of control to offer insights into how paradoxically, a medical regime of assisted dying reinforces health professionals as in control of the circumstances of dying. We argue that although legalized medical assisted dying is highly regulated and monitored, thus limiting freedom, the option of assisted dying also increases freedom for the dying person. Within this paradox of control, there is still scope for choice and an ethical making of the self, although limited by the biopolitical regime, that equates to a degree of freedom for participants.
个体能动性是后现代和新自由主义自我概念以及美好死亡观念的核心。协助自杀可以被理解为这些观念在死亡控制权属于个人的体现。本文旨在探讨个体能动性和控制,并运用生命权力和自由的概念来说明协助自杀中固有的悖论。由于立法的变化,协助自杀目前引起了广泛的关注。在研究时,新西兰议会正在通过《选择结束生命法案》,但还没有对接近生命终点的人进行关于协助自杀的研究。通过媒体,我们招募并采访了 14 名接近生命终点的人,如果他们有选择协助自杀的机会,他们会考虑选择。采用沉浸式/结晶主题分析对访谈进行分析。协助自杀吸引了参与者,因为它提供了控制。本文考察了控制的话语背景以及参与者对控制的感知,以深入了解医疗协助自杀制度如何具有讽刺意味地强化了卫生专业人员对死亡情况的控制。我们认为,尽管合法化的医疗协助自杀受到高度监管和监控,从而限制了自由,但协助自杀的选择也为临终者增加了自由。在这种控制的悖论中,仍然存在选择和自我伦理塑造的空间,尽管受到生物政治制度的限制,但这为参与者提供了一定程度的自由。