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Assisted dying in Swedish healthcare: a qualitative analysis of physicians' reasoning about physician-assisted suicide.
Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Umeå University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Clinical Sciences, Psychiatry.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3810-4916
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2024 (English)In: Monash Bioethics Review, ISSN 1321-2753, E-ISSN 1836-6716, Vol. 42, no 1, p. 99-114Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

To explore Swedish physicians' arguments and values for and against physician-assisted suicide (PAS) extracted from the free-text comments in a postal survey. A random selection of approximately 240 physicians from each of the following specialties: general practice, geriatrics, internal medicine, oncology, surgery and psychiatry. All 123 palliative care physicians in Sweden. A qualitative content analysis of free-text comments in a postal questionnaire commissioned by the Swedish Medical Society in collaboration with the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. The total response rate was 59.2%. Of the 933 respondents, 1107 comments were provided. The free-text comments entailed both normative and factual arguments for and against PAS. The analysis resulted in two main categories: (1) "Safe implementation of PAS is unachievable" (with subcategories "Criteria of PAS difficult to fulfil" and "PAS puts societal norms and values at risk") and (2) "The role of PAS in healthcare" (with subcategories "No medical need for PAS", "PAS is not a task for physicians", "No ethical difference to other end-of-life decisions" and "PAS is in the patient's best interest"). The respondents brought up well-known arguments from academic and public debate on the subject. Comments from physicians against PAS were more often emotionally charged and used devices like dysphemisms and slippery-slope arguments.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Springer Nature, 2024. Vol. 42, no 1, p. 99-114
Keywords [en]
Primum non nocere, Autonomy principle, Dysphemism, Physician assisted suicide, Physician attitude, Prescribing lethal drugs, Slippery-slope arguments
National Category
Medical Ethics
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URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-229875DOI: 10.1007/s40592-024-00202-5ISI: 001278325600001PubMedID: 39060645Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85199596552OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-229875DiVA, id: diva2:1899537
Available from: 2024-09-20 Created: 2024-09-20 Last updated: 2025-03-17Bibliographically approved

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Sandlund, Mikael

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