While this may differ between faiths, in general Christians never employ the idea of assisted suicide or euthanasia no matter how serious a person's illness is. Christians die with joy knowing they will soon be with the Lord in Heaven. All doctors and nurses, not just Christian ones, treat the dying person with respect and dignity and try to make them as comfortable as possible during the dying process.
Provided the dying person is of the Catholic faith, absolution is a blessing given by a Roman Catholic Priest, forgiving any sins the dying person may have committed in life and for which the dying person repents.
a person dying who donates a liver to a dying person
The last sense a dying person loses is hearing.
YES. Actually, every person is worth dying for.
Yes, it is common for a person with a dying fever to experience fluctuations in body temperature.
Unfortunately, if a dying person doesn't have the money to pay their rent, they can be evicted. The dying person should try and appeal to the landlord or make their case known to the press. A person can take a few years to die, not all fatal problems are quick, some can take a long time.
none at all their dying.
It depends what the person (or animal or plant) is dying of, on the individual circumstances, and where you consider the process of death to begin. It could be argued that if a person is alive one moment, and then unalive the next, that the actual process of dying is but an instant.
no. its SUPER peaceful. they dont notice the difference between nodding off and dying.
Someone who is not feeling too good.
Yes.
By dying.