Jules Good’s Letter On Anorexia Published In Washington Post

Jules Good’s important letter below, Anorexia Is Too Complex To Be Considered For Assisted Suicide, was published yesterday, November 20, in The Washington Post!:

The Nov. 2 Style article “Can anorexia ever be terminal?” discussed the use of physician-assisted suicide for anorexia patients. As a disability policy professional in recovery from anorexia, I want to stress the extreme dangers of creating a “terminal anorexia” diagnosis and offering assisted suicide to patients who fit those criteria.

When I was 19, I was eating fewer than 500 calories a day, working out obsessively, losing my hair and suffering dizzy spells from low blood pressure. I attempted suicide twice. I did not feel “infantilized,” as Joel Yager, a proponent of assisted suicide for anorexia, intimated in the article, when I was finally pushed to get help. Malnutrition and the irrational nature of the disease itself absolutely kept me from making sound decisions about my long-term health during this time. If I were under the care of someone who told me that killing myself was an acceptable option, I would be dead.

A requirement that people try “high-quality” treatment before going through with assisted suicide is not protective. Entering a treatment program is different from completing it. In fact, individuals in one case report left or failed treatment programs — and were still allowed to die by assisted suicide.

Because of the highly personal nature of anorexia, recovery is a long and complex process. Offering these patients, who are statistically more likely to be suicidal, the option to kill themselves as a form of “medical treatment” is irresponsible.

1 thought on “Jules Good’s Letter On Anorexia Published In Washington Post

  1. It just amazes me in this battle year after year, that even one person’s testimony about a life that would have ended under assisted suicide is not enough to say, Woah! Stop! A bridge too far. We are appalled that even one innocent person is executed by the justice system, but somehow it’s OK to kill people is a for-profit horribly run insurance scam.

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