Euthanasia in detention and the ethics of caring solidarity: A case study of the ‘Tarragona Gunman’
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Espericueta, LuisEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
aid‐in‐dying assisted suicide defendant
Fecha
2024-06-14Referencia bibliográfica
Espericueta, L Bioethics. 2024;1–9. [https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.13325]
Patrocinador
INEDyTO II projectResumen
Almost a year after the enactment of the law regulating euthanasia in Spain,
public opinion was shocked to learn that a defendant in criminal proceedings
obtained medical assistance in dying following injuries sustained in an exchange
of gunfire with the police after having committed a series of severe crimes.
Although there are very few cases in the world where prisoners have received
euthanasia, the one we will discuss in this article is the only known case where
both the public prosecutor's office and the private prosecutors judicially opposed
the defendant's euthanasia. This article aims to offer a new perspective on the
ethical legitimacy of detainees' access to euthanasia: the ethics of caring
solidarity. To do this,wewill first place the case in its legal context. Subsequently,
we will address the two main arguments proposed in the literature to justify
euthanasia in detention: respect for the autonomy of the detainee and the
principle of equivalence of care. Finally, after having identified serious shortcomings
in both arguments, we will argue that the perspective of caring solidarity
offers a better ethical basis for people in detention's access to euthanasia.