2m Koreans opt out of life
Nearly two million individuals in Korea have formally declined life-extending medical interventions, choosing instead to prioritize their right to die with dignity when suffering from a terminal condition, data showed Sunday.
Data from the National Agency for Management of Life-Sustaining Treatment reveals that as of the end of August, 1,941,231 people have filed an advance health care directive to abstain from life-saving medical assistance since the system's inception in February 2018.
Women make up the majority of individuals opting for this choice, accounting for 68 percent, or 1,319,812, of those registered, with men accounting for the remaining 32 percent, or 621,419.
Less than 100,000 people registered for the health care directive in 2018. However, the number surged to 530,000 in 2019, 790,000 in 2020, 1,160,000 in 2021 and 1,570,000 in 2022.
Judging from the current monthly growth rate, the number is projected to exceed two million in October.
Five and half years have passed since the so-called "Death with Dignity Act" came into effect in Korea in February 2018. The act enabled people to refuse life-prolonging medical treatment.
Any adult over the age of 19 can register for the advance medical directive detailing treatment plans in the case of terminal illness, which they can also withdraw from at any time.
The necessary documents can be submitted to the National Agency for Management of Life-Sustaining Treatment, and the information will then be registered in a government database shared by hospitals and public health institutions. Life-sustaining treatment can be halted under several conditions if an individual falls terminally ill. The requirements include confirmation by a family member, approval from the ethics committee at a medical institution, and the agreement of the patient’s primary doctor and another doctor who is an expert in the field.
Currently, four types of treatment -- cardiopulmonary resuscitation, use of artificial respiration, hemodialysis and administration of anti-cancer drugs -- are categorized as life-extension care by the government.
(责任编辑:영화)
下一篇:S. Korea, AIIB discuss stronger partnership, new investment chances
- ·Hyundai Rotem to showcase new ground weapons systems at Seoul expo
- ·Jeonse scams cause W510b in losses, with less than 25% recovered: lawmaker
- ·Import prices up for 3rd month in September on higher oil prices
- ·Foreign workers' deaths get weak sanctions
- ·이준석, 눈물의 회견…尹대통령 향해 "與 묵언 수행 저주 풀라"
- ·S.Korea's largest
- ·Seoul subway on verge of strike
- ·Hamas weapons, tactics resemble those of NK: JCS
- ·[Bills in Focus] Windfall tax on banks and urban infra refurbishment
- ·Network error grinds government network to halt, restoration still in progress
- ·Samyang post record sales on China's Singles Day
- ·First snow of winter falls in Seoul
- ·1 in 8 commercial flights exposed to pathogens: KDCA
- ·LG celebrates 1st baseball championship in 29 years with discounts
- ·Seoul shares end nearly flat amid signs of cooling US inflation
- ·LG to debut EV chargers in US next year
- ·Two dead in Gyeongju construction site collapse
- ·'Fuerza Bruta Wayra' returns to Seoul
- ·Trailblazer, Trax drive up GM Korea’s exports
- ·Seoul shares end nearly flat amid signs of cooling US inflation
- ·SK hynix wins 2023 R&D 100 Awards
- ·Seoul to expand monthly transit pass to cover Incheon
- ·'Batter Up': YG rookie Babymonster to debut as six
- ·EBS' new nature doc to explore symbiotic relationship between nature and humanity
- ·Chinese beer imports plunge amid Tsingtao scandal
- ·Han Kang says her historical novels were a literary resistance against violence
- ·Jeju Island offers many choices for holidaymakers with pets
- ·전문가 “북 중거리미사일 고체연료엔진, 러시아 기술 가능성”