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The ethical basis of suicide prevention is illustrated by contrasting helpline emergency rescue policies of the Samaritans in the UK and the US National Suicide Prevention Lifeline network. We contrast moralist, relativist and libertarian ethical premises and question whether suicide can be rational. Samaritans respect a caller’s right to decide to die by suicide; US helplines oblige emergency intervention during an attempt even against the caller’s will. We analyse the effect of emergency rescue when there is high suicide risk but an attempt has not been initiated. Issues of legal imperatives, jurisprudence and leeway given to helpers are analysed. We examine links between values and actions, the need for empirical evidence to guide practice, and propose vigorous dialogue about values in the grey zone of moral practice.
Ethical perspectives are presented on the acceptability of suicidal behaviours and the obligations and limitations of intervening to prevent suicides intervention. Ethical concerns may influence whether potentially life-saving interventions will be undertaken, and under which circumstances, as well as what is permissible in research studies. We identify three broadly defined ethical positions, recurrent in discourses concerning suicide, which we call moralist, libertarian and relativist. The moralist position contends that suicide is unacceptable and that there is a pervasive moral obligation to protect life that takes precedence in decision-making. Libertarian perspectives emphasise the individual’s freedom of choice to determine whether to live or die, with an absence of an obligation to interfere with the personal decision to die. Relativism refers to the belief that what is morally acceptable varies according to the context or framework of assessment. Stoic views on suicide are contrasted with Jewish, Christian and Moslem perspectives. We discuss if suicide can be rational, if there can be an obligation to suicide, a right to be protected from committing suicide, and Good Samaritan laws.
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