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Decisions near the end of life. Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, American Medical Association
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1992
Year
Mortality StudiesMedical TechnologyIncurable Painful DiseaseLawMedicolegal IssueHealth PoliticsDeath EducationHealth LawEthical PracticeEnd-of-life CareMedical LawMedical HistoryBioethicsHealthcare EthicPublic HealthHealth PolicyGeriatricsJudicial AffairsAmerican Medical AssociationGlobal AgingPublic Opinion PollHospicePalliative CareHospitalizationNursingHealth SystemsMedical EthicsPatient SafetyEnd-of-life IssueTerminal IllnessMedicine
OVER the last 50 years, people have become increasingly concerned that the dying process is too often needlessly protracted by medical technology and is consequently marked by incapacitation, intolerable pain, and indignity. In one public opinion poll, 68% of respondents believed that "people dying of an incurable painful disease should be allowed to end their lives before the disease runs its course."<sup>1</sup>A number of comparable surveys indicate similar public sentiment.<sup>2</sup> Since the turn of the century, there has been a dramatic shift in the places where people die. Sixty years ago, the vast majority of deaths occurred at home. Now most people die in hospitals or long-term care facilities. Approximately 75% of all deaths in 1987 occurred in hospitals and long-term care institutions,<sup>3</sup>up from 50% in 1949,61% in 1958, and 70% in 1977.<sup>4</sup>This transition from the privacy of the home to medical institutions