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Death with Dignity Legislation

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About this dataset:

Health care professionals are trained to “first do no harm.” In end-of-life treatment, that simple directive can be difficult to interpret. A growing movement to provide patients help in dying has been termed “death with dignity” and “assisted suicide.” Federal law does not address euthanasia and mercy killings in terminal patients; the right of a patient to obtain a prescription to terminate life is established by state law. This map explores which states have enacted death with dignity legislation, which outlaw physician-assisted suicide, which make the practice criminal and which are considering changes to current state policy legalizing the practice under certain circumstances.

Curator

Elizabeth Ann Glass Geltman, JD, LLM
School of Urban Public Health at Hunter College & CUNY School of Public Health

Dataset Created by
Elizabeth Ann Glass Geltman, JD, LLM

Dataset Maintained by
Policy Surveillance Program Staff

Dataset Valid From
October 31, 1994

Dataset Updated Through
June 30, 2016

Total Jurisdictions Covered
50