WASHINGTON (RNS)—People often say they want a good “quality of life” in their older years. But what does they mean when they say it?
When the Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project explored end-of-life decision-making for a new survey, senior researcher Cary Funk included questions on the “measures of a good life.”
It turns out that perhaps the most obvious choice—living without “severe lasting pain”—wasn’t at the top of the “quality of life” list. It came in at No. 4.
No. 1 was the ability to talk or communicate with others; 93 percent rated this extremely or very important.
Other top-ranking answers were:
• The ability to get “enjoyment out of life,” 90 percent
• The ability to feed yourself, 89 percent
• Living without severe pain, 87 percent
• Retaining long-term memory, and feeling worthwhile in what you do, tied at 83 percent
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• Being able to dress yourself, 81 percent
• Retaining short-term memory for events of the day, 71 percent
The idea that communication, physical independence and enjoyment in daily life are quality-of-life leaders fits with another finding of the survey: Most people are nearly as afraid of physical dependency as they are of pain.
While 57 percent said they would want to stop treatment and die if they had an incurable disease and were in a great deal of pain, a nearly equal number—52 percent—said they would give up treatment if they had an incurable disease that left them “totally dependent on another for care.”
This bolsters both supporters and opponents of laws that permit doctors to prescribe lethal drugs for terminally ill patients who want to set their own date of death.
Ben Mitchell, a professor of moral philosophy at Southern Baptist-affiliated Union University in Jackson, Tenn. Mitchell shared his views with Pew senior researcher David Masci in a report accompanying the survey.
If society would address the depression, loneliness and isolation of people suffering grave illnesses, people would be able to carry on their last days with what matters most—a sense of connection, saidBut Peg Sandeen, executive director of Death with Dignity, which advocates for legalizing doctors’ aid in dying, said personal independence is a critical value to people who suffer if they lose their ability to make their own choices.
“A compassionate society does not allow people to suffer unnecessarily,” she said.
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