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Physician-Assisted Suicide: State Legislation Teetering at the Pinnacle of a Slippery Slope

Abstract

Physician-assisted suicide has become the subject of a hotly contested legal and political debate, both in the United States and abroad. In 1997, the United States Supreme Court rendered two decisions concerning physician-assisted suicide, and two states recently enacted legislation on this issue: Oregon in 1997 and Virginia in 1998. Nevertheless, the legality of physician-assisted suicide remains unclear as doctors, pharmacists, legal commentators, and a growing segment of the general population continue to argue over the line between letting die and killing. This Note analyzes both the constitutional and political aspects of the right-to-die debate, focusing primarily on the political arguments and reasons why the assisted suicide issue should be resolved in the political arena

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