The article discusses the legal and ethical challenges surrounding euthanasia and physician-assisted dying in Slovenia, focusing on the law on assistance in voluntary termination of life (ZPPKŽ). The author, dddr. Pleterski, argues that this law could address many issues within the healthcare system, including legal and ethical ambiguities in palliative care and doctors' autonomous decisions. However, the author disagrees with Pleterski’s assessment that the ZPPKŽ would effectively help individuals like Vesna Prijatelj, who wished to end her life in a hospital setting. The author believes that existing laws fail to resolve fundamental legal and ethical dilemmas, particularly around cases where treatment causes death due to double effect. They argue that current practices often obscure these issues through euphemisms and semantic gymnastics to avoid comparisons with euthanasia. The author emphasizes the need for clearer criteria for permissible treatment under the double effect doctrine and highlights that Slovenia is not alone in facing these unresolved legal and ethical questions.
Lettura del bias (Sinistra): The article frames the discussion around the legal and ethical limitations of current medical practices, emphasizing the need for reform and critical examination of existing frameworks. It critiques the lack of clear guidelines and suggests that current approaches obscure rather than resolve ethical
Perché questi punteggi (Fattualità 85 · Obiettività 65): The article presents a critical analysis of the assisted dying law and discusses ethical and legal issues in end-of-life care. It references academic opinions and historical context, aligning with cross-source consensus on the complexities of medical ethics. However, the tone is somewhat subjective





