A terminally ill patient could be a person who has final stage cancer and is in severe pain and they only have a few more months to live. The patient is aware the burden they are putting on their family and they want a way out of it. The cost of medications and hospital is sometimes hard on the family. “A competent dying person has some knowledge of this, and with every day that he or she is kept alive, the hospital costs skyrocket.” (The right to assisted suicide, Lone Star college) The cost would lead a patient to assisted suicide, to end their life faster so their family will not have to go through too much. Assisted suicide is good because it helps someone end their pain faster and it helps their family financially. Assisted suicide is only good for terminally ill patients. If a person who is not as sick, but wants to die so their family won’t go through financial struggle because of them is not right and they should not look at assisted suicide. If a terminally ill patient feels as if assisted suicide is want they want, everyone should know that they are pursuing their happiness. Terminally ill patients should be able to die with dignity even if that means that they are going to undergo the assisted suicide process. If a patient were to ask his relative to kill him because they just can’t take it anymore and they agree to do it would it be considered murder? If the patient was in that much pain and they both agree on it, it should not be looked as murder. In Assisted Suicide:A Right or a Wrong? By Claire Andre and Manuel Velasquez the article begins with a story of a patient assisted by their brother and he was tried with murder. Since assisting someone in suicide is illegal the brother was tried with murder even though he was helping relieve his brothers pain. What he did was a good thing since his brother was enduring a lot of pain and he was already falling apart. Assisted suicide should not be