Ethical dilemma: prevent a suicide at your own risk
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Ethical dilemma: prevent a suicide at your own risk
I'm not sure if this counts as an ethical dilemma, but I'll post it anyway to give something to chew on for the mindful.
What if you found yourself in a position where someone with a gun or knife is threatening to kill themselves? Or hell, even if they're threatening to jump out of a building. The bottom line is, if you intervene physically you might be stabbed/shot or pulled down with the guy if he jumps. So to intervene you have to place yourself at risk, there is a chance you might be hurt or injured or perhaps even killed (hell what's a murder-suicide to a guy who's contemplating suicide and is armed?).
The question is: what do you do? Sit back and watch human tragedy unfolding with detached observation? Tell the guy bon voyage and to try and not make too much of a mess? Scuffle Chuck Norris style to prevent another statistic? Try to reason with the person at arm's length? Turn around and get the hell out of there, possibly to call the police or someone? Or maybe just to get out of there. Throw the guy a phone after calling some suicide prevention hotline?
What do you do? Go nuts.
What if you found yourself in a position where someone with a gun or knife is threatening to kill themselves? Or hell, even if they're threatening to jump out of a building. The bottom line is, if you intervene physically you might be stabbed/shot or pulled down with the guy if he jumps. So to intervene you have to place yourself at risk, there is a chance you might be hurt or injured or perhaps even killed (hell what's a murder-suicide to a guy who's contemplating suicide and is armed?).
The question is: what do you do? Sit back and watch human tragedy unfolding with detached observation? Tell the guy bon voyage and to try and not make too much of a mess? Scuffle Chuck Norris style to prevent another statistic? Try to reason with the person at arm's length? Turn around and get the hell out of there, possibly to call the police or someone? Or maybe just to get out of there. Throw the guy a phone after calling some suicide prevention hotline?
What do you do? Go nuts.
The person trying to kill themselves has consented to die in this case. I don't have an ethical obligation to risk life and limb to rescue them, but I should probably try to talk them down from harming themselves. The big question I see is whether or not the person can really be considered to have self-consent (I think I just made that phrase up, but you probably know what it means). If they're seriously mentally ill, I'm not sure we can consider them to have given consent to die, which increases our ethical responsibility to save them.
Does it depend on the degree of danger? If the only choice is:
1. The person jumps and dies, or
2. The person jumps and dies, with a 100% chance I go with him,
then it would seem that I have to choose #1. But if there is a genuine realistic chance of saving the person, I'm ethically obligated to do so (assuming again that they're mentally ill and not able to give self-consent).
Does it depend on the degree of danger? If the only choice is:
1. The person jumps and dies, or
2. The person jumps and dies, with a 100% chance I go with him,
then it would seem that I have to choose #1. But if there is a genuine realistic chance of saving the person, I'm ethically obligated to do so (assuming again that they're mentally ill and not able to give self-consent).
Re: Ethical dilemma: prevent a suicide at your own risk
For a complete stranger? Not a damn thing. At most, I call the cops but that'll be pushing it.Stofsk wrote:
What do you do?
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Look, if he's actually stating that he's going to kill himself, and he's looking ready to jump/shoot/cut/whatever, he doesn't probably actually want to die. If he did, he'd be quiet about it, wouldn't make a fuss. Talk the fucker down, or if that doesn't quite do it.. I'd see if I could get close enough to maybe take the weapon without being killed by the fucker, and I probably would be big enough to keep both him and myself from going over the edge of a building or some such thing.
Of course, that's just me, and I never gave much of a fuck about me anyways.
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talk to him as much as I can at arms length, try to get him to give me the gun/walk away from the side of the building
I'll not under any circumstances try to tackle him away from the side of the building nor wrestle the gun away from his hands - due to a combination of legal rammifications which would adversely affect me and my family if I fail to gain the upper hand and of course even if I am successful, things like this.
Basically, anything I can do without putting myself in immediate danger I'll do to try and save his life. If it's a woman, I'll put myself in a moderate ammount of immediate danger to try to help her...
I'll not under any circumstances try to tackle him away from the side of the building nor wrestle the gun away from his hands - due to a combination of legal rammifications which would adversely affect me and my family if I fail to gain the upper hand and of course even if I am successful, things like this.
Basically, anything I can do without putting myself in immediate danger I'll do to try and save his life. If it's a woman, I'll put myself in a moderate ammount of immediate danger to try to help her...
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Societies should allow people to pretty much do whatever they want as long as they don't harm others, right? But in some circumstances society deems that people don't have the necessary level of competence to make those decisions (example: minor children can't consent legally to a great many things). If someone is impaired in some way, either permanently in the case of severe mental illness, or temporarily in the case of someone who is drunk or on drugs, don't we have an obligation to prevent that person from doing undue harm to him- or herself? So can we really say everyone has the right to forfeit?Kazuaki Shimazaki wrote:To me, everyone has the right to forfeit. As long as he/she isn't going to hurt anyone with his suicide, it isn't my place to stop him.
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1) call the police, ambulance etc
2) reason with him from FAR away in case his decision to suicide is because he has a mental illness (ie he is not "himself").
If it is a mental illness, some of these are cries for help, as they have a habit of not killing themselves successfully. Successful suicides are usually dead before the ambulance even arrived.
However his life is not worth mine, and I wouldn't risk physical danger to myself. This is even if I am convinced he has a mental illness. One of the cardinal rules of first aid is to watch for danger to yourself, because there is no point trying to help someone and end up needing rescue yourself (it will lead to the next guy needing to rescue 2 people instead of one).
2) reason with him from FAR away in case his decision to suicide is because he has a mental illness (ie he is not "himself").
If it is a mental illness, some of these are cries for help, as they have a habit of not killing themselves successfully. Successful suicides are usually dead before the ambulance even arrived.
However his life is not worth mine, and I wouldn't risk physical danger to myself. This is even if I am convinced he has a mental illness. One of the cardinal rules of first aid is to watch for danger to yourself, because there is no point trying to help someone and end up needing rescue yourself (it will lead to the next guy needing to rescue 2 people instead of one).
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The suicide will directly effect any family members or loved ones or whomever who may spend years in mental anguish asking "why?", so saying that it harms no one else is nonsense. And there probably isn't time to ask this person's life story, so we can't assume he or she is alone in the world, friendless, or with no desire to live. The individual in question is certainly desperate and probably not thinking clearly, aside from any other mental issues. Talking to the person is the least someone could do, so I would probably try to do that.
Re: Ethical dilemma: prevent a suicide at your own risk
I would do that, try to provide an emotional support. And if it got really, really nasty, I might jump in, but, to be honest, I'd probably be too afraid to do so.Stofsk wrote:Try to reason with the person at arm's length?
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Only if you trust society to have an objective standard on this ... and with the feds slapping around states like Oregon with rational assisted-death laws, how can you trust in that?Turin wrote:Societies should allow people to pretty much do whatever they want as long as they don't harm others, right? But in some circumstances society deems that people don't have the necessary level of competence to make those decisions (example: minor children can't consent legally to a great many things). If someone is impaired in some way, either permanently in the case of severe mental illness, or temporarily in the case of someone who is drunk or on drugs, don't we have an obligation to prevent that person from doing undue harm to him- or herself? So can we really say everyone has the right to forfeit?Kazuaki Shimazaki wrote:To me, everyone has the right to forfeit. As long as he/she isn't going to hurt anyone with his suicide, it isn't my place to stop him.
It's not my place to tell him not to do it, what the hell do I know about the life he leads inside his skull? Just don't make a mess or take anybody else with you.
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Given the misery that his suicide might inflict on relatives, friends, family members etc., I would want to stop it but I would not expose myself to danger. I value my life more than his.
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If it's a complete stranger I know nothing about, I'd simply tell them to go right ahead. Any possible reason I try and use to convince them otherwise would sound contrite and insincere, since I know absolutely nothing about them, so why should I make the effort? It's not as though they're threatening to shoot, stab, or otherwise harm anyone else in the area except themselves. They're simply being a bit more public about it than if they'd gone into their bedroom and tried slitting their wrists. At the most I'd consider calling 911, otherwise it's not really my place to interfere.
Though I suppose if i really was expected to try and stop them, I'd ask them how come they haven't killed themselves already if they were truly intent on removing themselves from the genepool? If they wanted to die as badly as they were claiming, they'd have done it already. Get them to explain their reasoning, etc., maybe calm them down.
Though I suppose if i really was expected to try and stop them, I'd ask them how come they haven't killed themselves already if they were truly intent on removing themselves from the genepool? If they wanted to die as badly as they were claiming, they'd have done it already. Get them to explain their reasoning, etc., maybe calm them down.
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Nope, ain't risking my life. I ain't trained in suicide prevention, anything I do beyond trying to talk to the person will likely escalate the situation and lead to bad shit. Talk to the guy if I have to, call the cops & trained experts in to deal with it, better to have one dead guy than 2.
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According to the suicide intervention course I took when I was in the Army, that's exactly what your supposed to do. Try to talk him/her out of it, but at no time do you expose yourself to danger, that just generates another body. As sometimes they want to take someone wth them when they want to go.Darth Wong wrote:Given the misery that his suicide might inflict on relatives, friends, family members etc., I would want to stop it but I would not expose myself to danger. I value my life more than his.
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The most I would do is walk away and call the cops. I'm not a trained psychologist. If I were to actually try to talk to the person, I would, in a fit of spiteful frustration, probably end up yelling: "JUST JUMP ALREADY, YOU WORTHLESS DONKEY-FUCKER! QUIT WASTING MY TIME! ARRGH, I'LL PUSH YOU MYSELF! *throws nearby rock*"
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I'm torn on this. I know that I didn't want anyone to come remotely near me. Kind of a "Just let me fucking do this alone" thing. The fact that someone's out in public doesnt always mean theyre scared, or wont go through with it. If you're at that point, and you feel like youve done nothing but hurt and make things harder for those you care about, you're not going to want your family to come home and discover your body. Even though I understand the feelings and all that, I couldn't stand knowing I did nothing. I would talk to them for as long as I could.
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Well the first thing you do is call the prevention hotline; then ask him/her why, because you want to give the impression, that even you, a complete stranger, cares. I'd tell 'em they had one last phone call, and give it to the hotline. If push comes to shove, I'd try to physically interevene, unless the suicidee had a gun, or was 3 feet from an open window.
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I fail to see how this would be my problem. If it's a person I don't know, then I have no reason to even attempt to sway a descision that he has already made. I am assuming that the person in this OP is a legal adult and is capable of making his own descisions.
Why should I interfere with another adult making a descision regarding his own life (or lack thereof)? It is not my affair.
Why should I interfere with another adult making a descision regarding his own life (or lack thereof)? It is not my affair.
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Bullshit.Turin wrote:The person trying to kill themselves has consented to die in this case.
Wet, drippy, nasty, festering bullshit.
I won't say there are no cases where that statement applies, but they goddamn fucking rare.
99.999999999% of suicides are mentally ill.. Oh, yeah, they "choose" to die, they "consent" to die....
Do epileptics "choose" to have seizures?
To put it bluntly, suicidal people are sick in the head. Ill. They can't meaningfully "consent".
As for the OP question - I'm not going to run a high risk of death myself to stop someone trying to kill themselves. If I can talk them out of it, or if there's a reasonably safe way to disarm/immobilize them until more help arrives I'll take it, but that's about it.
I'd probably exert myself more for a relative or close friend than a complete stranger.
I couldn't walk away, or worse yet stand beneath a tall building and yell "jump!", but I'm not going to risk going over the edge of a roof myself in order to stop the truly determined. I want to live!
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