7.2-7.5 million people die from terminal illnesses annually
10000
i think its banana
Well ill answer your question with a question. How many homeless people in the us like to jog?
It is the fifth most heavily populated State in the US with over 12.9 residents.
you mean to help them end their lives? not in the US at the moment.Answer:The provision of the option of euthanasia for terminally ill patients is a reasonable option for both the patient and the doctor. Carefully crafted checks and balances to prevent coercion are required, but in many cases it is the only option that provides a death with dignity.
Send them to St Mary's high school, addressing them to Hannah
I think it has allot to do with what we need to survive... We need our hearts to live, breathe and function without it we cannot function at all. Same goes for love.... Love gives us purpose, it gives us worth and it drives us to function and better ourselves. How many people have committed suicide after losing a loved one or fell terminally ill? a broken heart means the will to live is broken....
Approximately 20% of adults in the United States experience some form of mental illness in a given year. This translates to roughly 1 in 5 individuals.
Many professional doctors do not think that a change in temperature will make a person ill.
The people in Folsense are not really getting ill, they are not real people with Flesh and Blood like us, they are Robots and they need be repaired from time to time that way they will be around forever.
no
There has to be a balance between respect for life at all costs, and the reality of maintaining and using scarce resources for those who are healthy and/or those whose illnesses can be cured. It is a dilemma, and an ethical issue that we have not really solved at state or federal levels. Is it reasonable for us to maintain someone who is in a persistent and intractable vegetative state even if the vegetative state may last for many years? If someone is conscious but terminally ill and either in unbearable pain or in a medically induced coma, should a patient's desire to end the pain be recognized as a legitimate treatment given the physician's oath to 'do no harm'? Could it be argued that maintaining life while there is no quality of life whatsoever is really a form of doing harm?
Disgusts keep us away from things that could make us ill. Rotten things that are decaying contain microbes and many of these can cause diseases. They kill millions of people and make billions of others sick.