The view of religious corporations toward euthanasia and extraordinary treatments in Japan
        Journal of religion and health Volume 39 Issue 4
        Page 339-354
        
    published_at 2000-12
            Title
        
        The view of religious corporations toward euthanasia and extraordinary treatments in Japan
        
        
    
            Creator Keywords
        
            euthanasia
            extraordinary treatment
            religion
            Buddhism
            Shinto
            Japan
    388 Japanese religious groups-143 Shinto, 157 Buddhist, 58 Christian and 30 others-were asked to answer questions regarding several forms of euthanasia and extraordinary treatment during the dying process. Passive euthanasia and indirect euthanasia were accepted by around 70% of the respondents. Active euthanasia was favored by less than 20% of them. Christians were less supportive of euthanasia than practitioners of other religions. Shinto and Buddhist corporations advocated being natural, when medical treatment became futile at the terminal stage. Religionists' views may deepen the discussion of end-of-life issues.
        
        
            Languages
        
            eng
    
    
        
            Resource Type
        
        journal article
    
    
        
            Publishers
        
            Springer
    
    
        
            Date Issued
        
        2000-12
    
    
        
            File Version
        
        Author’s Original
    
    
        
            Access Rights
        
        open access
    
    
    
        
            Schools
        
            大学院医学系研究科(医学)
    
                
