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Lawful Exit: The Limits of Freedom for Help in Dying
 
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Lawful Exit: The Limits of Freedom for Help in Dying [Paperback]

Derek Humphry (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 1993
'Lawful Exit' analyzes why the attempts to reform the law on euthanasia in Washington and California states have failed. This book points a new direction for legal, medical assisted dying for the terminally ill, emphasizing ethical and practical guidelines to prevent abuse.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Derek Humphry is considered the world's foremost spokesperson on voluntary euthanasia for the terminally ill. He lectures on the subject in many countries and his books are published in all major languages.

He is well known for his l991 bestseller "Final Exit" which, in revised editions, is the top seller in its field.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 165 pages
  • Publisher: Norris Lane Pr (September 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0963728008
  • ISBN-13: 978-0963728005
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5 x 0.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,040,460 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Derek Humphry was born in Bath, England, 04.29.1930 and brought up in a broken family. Despite a poor education, further damaged by six years of war, Derek determined to become a writer. Starting as a newspaper messenger boy on the Yorkshire Post at 15, he worked his way up as a reporter on the Bristol Evening World, the Manchester Evening News to the London Daily Mail, the London Sunday Times and finally the Los Angeles Times.

Always an advocacy journalist, Derek wrote books on race relations, police corruption and a biography of Michael X. For 'Because They're Black' he won the Martin Luther King Memorial Prize.

When the wife to whom he had been married for 22 years developed inoperable cancer, he nursed her for two years until she asked him to help her die. Close to the end, Jean chose to end her life with lethal drugs to avoid further suffering. In time, he married again and moved to America.

Derek published in l978 a little book Jean's Way describing Jean's final years and his part in helping her to die peacefully. It became a bestseller and was translated into major languages.

The public response to the book caused him to start the Hemlock Society USA in 1980 from his garage in Santa Monica. Hemlock's purpose was to help people in similar situations as Jean's and also to reform the laws to permit physician-assisted suicide.

Derek built Hemlock into a national organization, with 40,000 members and 80 chapters. In l991 he wrote 'Final Exit' - a 'how-to' book for the dying to bring their suffering to an end if they chose. To much surprise, it became a #1 bestseller within six months. It was translated into 12 languages. Random House keeps the 3rd edition of 'Final Exit' in print in 2010, and it is still in print in Spanish and Italian. USA TODAY in 2007 chose it as one of the most significant books of the past 25 years.

His latest book is a memoir --'Good Life, Good Death' -- covering 79 years of an eventful life -- ranging from an unusual childhood in a broken home, a father in prison, a mother who ran away to Australia, then experiencing an ugly war which started when he was nine. The book relates his remarkable experiences in journalism, outstanding interviews with famous people, and his struggle against racism. Derek immigrated to the USA at age 48.

The second half of the memoir deals with his impact on the right to die movement in America, starting and building the Hemlock Society for 12 years, and pioneering the Oregon Death With Dignity Act (l994), the first such physician-assisted suicide law in North America.

Proud to be a paperback writer, Derek has published 15 books in 40 years. Only two have been hardbacks.

Derek is president of the Euthanasia Research & Guidance Organization (ERGO), chairman of the advisory board of the Final Exit Network (successor to the now defunct Hemlock Society), and an advisor to the World Federation of Right to Die Societies, of which he has been president.

Although unlettered himself, Derek has been a guest lecturer at Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, USC, UCLA, University of Michigan, University of Chicago, and others.

In his book "A Merciful End: The Euthanasia Movement in Modern America,' Ian Dowbiggin
writes: "Humphry ranks as one of the preeminent pioneers of the American euthanasia movement." (OUP. 2003. Page 149). In their book 'Dying Right', the authors Daniel Hillyard and John Dombrink write: "Derek Humphry is widely acknowledged to be the initiatior of the euthanasia reform movement in the United States." (Routledge NY 2001. Page 82.)

A citizen of the USA and UK, he lived in Los Angeles l978-88 and since then in western Oregon. He has been married to Gretchen (nee Crocker) since l991.
[Update: 22 March 2010]


 

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's Great !!, December 31, 2001
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"august-1" (Portland, Oregon; United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lawful Exit: The Limits of Freedom for Help in Dying (Paperback)
It met all my expectations ! Well written !! Very informative.WORTH EVERY PENNEY.Recommended reading.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Books, September 12, 2010
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This review is from: Lawful Exit: The Limits of Freedom for Help in Dying (Paperback)
The book was in great condition and I recieved it fast. I will look for more products from this seller. Thanks!
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4.0 out of 5 stars OPEN QUESTIONS FOR THE RIGHT-TO-DIE, August 13, 2010
This review is from: Lawful Exit: The Limits of Freedom for Help in Dying (Paperback)
Derek Humphry
Lawful Exit:
The Limits of Freedom for Help in Dying

(Junction City, OR: Norris Lane Press, 1993) 166 pages
(Library of Congress call number: R726.H847 1993)

Derek Humphry--champion of the right-to-die--
explores several legal details in the process of winning the right-to-die.
Many provisions have been proposed for various right-to-die laws.
Some are more workable than others.
Some deal with very unlikely possibilities.
Humphry presents his own Model Death-with-Dignity Act
as an appendix to this book.

History has moved on in the years since this book was published.
But some of the same issues are still discussed.
And reading this book could provide a background
for the debate about the right-to-die
that will continue in the 21st century.

Here are some of the legal issues discussed:

1. How shall we define and use our technical terms?
2. How can we make tacit 'decisions' more open and honest?
3. Should doctors be involved in the process of ending life?
4. When doctors are involved, should they be especially qualified
in the disease or other condition of the patient?
5. How can be make sure that a second professional opinion
is really independent?
6. Must patients choosing death be competent?
7. Must patients choosing death be terminal?
8. How should we decide for infants and children?
9. Must patients choosing death have a physical illness
or could mental suffering ever by a sufficient reason?
10. Should a psychological evaluation of the patient be required?
11. Should a medical trial of pain-control be required?
12. Should we have special protections for disabled people?
13. What documentation of voluntary deaths
or merciful deaths should be required?
14. Should voluntary deaths and merciful deaths
be certified by judges?
15. Residency requirements:
Should only local people be granted the right-to-die?
16. How can we avoid the right-to-die becoming the duty-to-die?
17. Should we prohibit or regulate 'suicide clinics'?
18. How should we protect health-care personnel
from criminal, civil, & administrative sanctions if they follow the guidelines?
19. How should we handle people with Alzheimer's disease?
20. Should there be special safeguards for residents of nursing homes?
21. What sense does it make to report the fulfilling of safeguards
after the death has already occurred?
22. Should the laws be changed by a direct vote of the people?
23. Are legislators usually too timid to vote for the right-to-die?
24. What about patients who wish to choose death
who lack the physical capacity to kill themselves?
25. How long should the patient have to wait
between a request for death and when relief is finally granted?
26. How do we prevent coerced death?
27. What kind of documentation or witnesses
for a request for death should be required?
28. Must all family members be notified of a request for death?

One chapter in Lawful Exit
reviews the efforts in three states to change the law:
Washington, California, & Oregon.
Much of the opposition focused around lack of safeguards.

This book offers a good opportunity to review and re-consider
many of the details of any proposed laws concerning the right-to-die.

The above book-review also appears on the Internet,
where it has more than 10 links to further information.
Search this exact expression: "More Books on the Right-to-Die".

James Leonard Park, advocate of the right-to-die with careful safeguards.
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