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      Depression and the right to die.

      General hospital psychiatry
      Adult, Attitude to Death, Decision Making, Depression, psychology, Euthanasia, legislation & jurisprudence, Female, Humans, Life Support Care, standards, Male, Mental Competency, Middle Aged, Physician-Patient Relations, Psychiatry, Referral and Consultation, Right to Die, Suicide

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          Abstract

          There is a complex relationship between depression and the capacity to forego life-sustaining treatment. On the one hand, the courts have recognized a constitutionally protected right to die for competent persons; on the other hand, psychiatrists have tended toward the presumption of incompetence on the part of anyone who refuses lifesaving treatment. This traditional psychiatric viewpoint stems from experience with many patients whose wish to die disappears when their depression is successfully treated.

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