Scopetti Matteo, Morena Donato, Padovano Martina, Manetti Federico, Di Fazio Nicola, Delogu Giuseppe, Ferracuti Stefano, Frati Paola, Fineschi Vittorio
Department of Medical Surgical Sciences and Translational Medicine, Sapienza University of Rome, 00189 Rome, Italy.
Department of Anatomical, Histological, Forensic and Orthopaedic Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, 00185 Rome, Italy.
Healthcare (Basel). 2023 May 18;11(10):1470. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11101470.
The admission of people suffering from psychiatric and neurocognitive disorders to euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide (E/PAS) in some European and non-European countries represents a controversial issue. In some countries, the initial limitation of E/PAS to cases of severe physical illness with poor prognosis in the short term has been overcome, as it was considered discriminatory; thus, E/PAS has also been made available to subjects suffering from mental disorders. This decision has raised significant ethical questions regarding the capacity and freedom of self-determination; the family, social, and economic contexts; the social consideration of the sense of dignity and the pressure on the judgment of one's personal value; the contextual therapeutic possibilities; the identification of figures involved in the validation and application; as well as the epistemological definitions of the clinical conditions in question. To these issues must be added the situation of legislative vacuum peculiar to different countries and the widespread lack of effective evaluation and control systems. Nonetheless, pessimistic indicators on global health status, availability of care and assistance, aging demographics, and socioeconomic levels suggest that there may be further pressure toward the expansion of such requests. The present paper aims to trace an international overview with the aim of providing ethical support to the debate on the matter. Precisely, the goal is the delimitation of foundations for clinical practice in the complex field of psychiatry between the recognition of the irreversibility of the disease, assessment of the state of physical and mental suffering, as well as the possibility of adopting free and informed choices.
在一些欧洲和非欧洲国家,患有精神疾病和神经认知障碍的人被允许实施安乐死和医生协助自杀(E/PAS),这是一个颇具争议的问题。在一些国家,E/PAS最初仅限于短期内预后不佳的严重身体疾病患者,后来这种限制被打破,因为人们认为这具有歧视性;因此,患有精神障碍的人也可以选择E/PAS。这一决定引发了一系列重大的伦理问题,涉及自主决定权的能力和自由、家庭、社会和经济背景、尊严感的社会考量以及个人价值判断所面临的压力、情境治疗的可能性、参与验证和应用的人员的确定,以及相关临床状况的认识论定义。除此之外,不同国家还存在立法空白的情况,且普遍缺乏有效的评估和控制系统。尽管如此,全球健康状况、护理和援助的可获得性、人口老龄化以及社会经济水平等方面的悲观指标表明,此类请求的扩张可能会面临进一步的压力。本文旨在进行国际概述,为有关该问题的辩论提供伦理支持。确切地说,目标是在精神病学这一复杂领域的临床实践基础界定方面,兼顾疾病不可逆性的认识、身心痛苦状态的评估以及做出自由和知情选择的可能性。