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The
AGs Other War
By Kathryn Jean Lopez, NRO Executive Editor |
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The Reno-era ruling allowed doctors to prescribe federally controlled substances to patients who wanted to die. Ashcroft countered that assisted suicide is not a "legitimate medical purpose for prescribing, dispensing, or administering federally controlled substances." In a letter to Drug Enforcement Administration head Asa Hutchinson, the attorney general demanded the suspension or revocation of the drug licenses of doctors who assist suicides in such a manner. He based the reversal on a Supreme Court ruling from earlier in the year that barred the sale of marijuana for medical use. Ashcroft's move effectively invalidates Oregon's assisted-suicide law. The state's attorney general plans to contest the ruling in a federal court Wednesday. In the spirit of
compassionate conservatism, the attorney general encouraged doctors
to prescribe controlled substances for pain management when necessary.
Indeed, in the states that have passed laws prohibiting assisted suicides,
a renewed emphasis on pain management has been a lifesaver for seriously
ill patients. |