By: Brittany Lewis
MADISON, Wis. (CBS 58) -- State lawmakers have introduced legislation
that gives terminally ill patients the option to have doctors help them
end their lives.
"I think it is immoral to keep those people
suffering the last days of their life," said State Senator Fred Risser, D
- Madison.
Sen. Risser says the first time he introduced the
legislation was in 1993 and he believes people's opinions on the topic
have changed since then.
The End-of-Life Options Act (LRB
1624-1) would allow mentally capable, terminally ill adults with less
than six months to live the ability to end life on their own terms.
The
Executive Director for Wisconsin Right to Life says she has concerns
there aren't safeguards in place for people who think this is the best
alternative.
"It's not a doctor's job to take life, it's not a
doctor's job to assist in the killing of someone at the end of
life," says Heather Weininger, Executive Director for Wisconsin Right to
Life. "What they should be doing is providing comfort care to those
people. That's what they should be doing."
Sen. Risser says the bill is being circulated among lawmakers to see what kind of support it receives.
Full Article & Source:
Wisconsin lawmakers introduce legislation that would legalize physician-assisted suicide
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