News, 12 June 2003
The case of a 52-year-old woman who committed suicide, allegedly
following advice from a website, has sparked a legal battle to crack
down on websites offering information on suicide methods. The woman
from St Louis in the United States had a history of clinical depression
and used helium to asphyxiate herself. Printouts of instructions
downloaded from the Internet were found nearby. St Louis Circuit
Attorney Jennifer Joyce claims that she would not have killed herself
if it had not been for the content of the website and wants to bring
charges of voluntary manslaughter against the person who provided the
information. Suicide websites have sparked grave concerns by mental
health experts and in March, the British government announced that it
was investigating the possibility of censoring such sites. [
Macon Telegraph, 11 June]
A 31-year-old geriatric nurse has appeared in a German court, charged
with the murder of two patients. The nurse is alleged to have injected
the two women, aged 81 and 89, with fatal doses of insulin and may have
been involved in the deaths of at least six others. This is the second
case of insulin murder by a geriatric nurse to have been reported in
Germany in under a week. The nurse remains in custody and has refused
to make a statement. [
Expatica, 11 June]
A 76-year-old man has approached Kerala (India) High Court, appealing
for the right to seek medical help to end his life. V K Pillai has
already had his case turned down by the same court but is applying
again on the grounds that he is ill but does not want to commit suicide
as it would put him in a 'morally grey world of moral wrongdoing.' He
has also asked to have his organs removed and donated. [
www.web.mid-day.com, 10 June]
Following reports earlier in the week that Boston researchers had
discovered an apparent link between the greater size of male babies and
their stimulation of the mother's appetite, The Times has reported that
the research may help to explain why children develop allergies. It has
been suggested that pregnant women who consume protein rich foods such
as peanuts or breathe in pollen may affect their unborn child as
allergens cross the placental barrier. However, a more established
theory is that the increase in allergies is due to the sanitised
environments in which children in the UK and Northern Europe are
growing up. [
The Times, 12 June]
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