tfilm (02/16/83)
RE: From 'On the Nature of Suicide' In his prologue to 'On the Nature of Suicide', Schneidman (1) quotes Weisemann and Hackett (2) "What makes one death appropriate and another death tragic?..... Part of an answer to this is to be found in the aversion among doctors to confront themselves with tha fact of their own death and to wonder if death can ever be appropriate for them. Despair wears many masks; a hard shell of materialism may cover a tenderness that shuns exposure. The dedication to forestall death is an indication that the medical profession believes that death is never appropriate." I have often wondered why it is that the medical profession goes to such extent to preserve 'life' in a body which should have 'died' long ago. It appears that W & H have presented a somewhat obverse possibility, that is, 'the medical profession believes that *death* is not appropriate' (my emphasis). What does the medical profession believe is appropriate? What is their belief based upon? They (W & H) go on to discuss the four principal requirements af an appropriate death, and I suppose, may somewhere discuss at length how the medical profession Any thoughts? 1. E. S. Schneidman (Ph.D., chief, Center for Studies of Suicide Prevention, National Institute of Mental Health; clinical professor of psychiatry (suicidology), George Washington University School of Medicine; lecturer in psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine) 2. Weismann and Hackett, "Predilection to Death: Death and Dying as a Psychiatric Problem", Psychosomatic Medicine, 23, 1961, 232-256. MEL ihuxp!tfilm MEL 830216