The authors hold that it can reasonably be argued that even when persons whose life is supported in an irreversible unconscious state may technically be physiologically stable and may remain in that state for very long periods, they are in fact terminally ill and really dying although their death is not imminent.
The authors hold that it can reasonably be argued that even when persons whose life is supported in an irreversible unconscious state may technically be physiologically stable and may remain in that state for very long periods, they are in fact terminally ill and really dying although their death is not imminent.
See p. 423.
The authors hold that it can reasonably be argued that even when persons whose life is supported in an irreversible unconscious state may technically be physiologically stable and may remain in that state for very long periods, they are in fact terminally ill and really dying although their death is not imminent.
See p. 423.