You can hear the podcast through her website www. New weekly episodes are posted on Fridays. Topics range from the U. John McCain R-Ariz. Newsweek magazine named The Diane Rehm Show one of the most interesting talk shows in the country. In , Diane Rehm won a Personal Peabody Award, considered among the most prestigious and selective prizes in electronic media, for her more than 30 years in public broadcasting.
Having watched my husband go through his suffering, I immediately signed on. We went around the country and did more than 40 interviews with people of all perspectives and thoughts on the subject.
Then, once we were finished doing the interviews, I took some of them and created the book. The subjects knew where Rehm stood on the issue, even if they disagreed.
They knew that as someone who had been an interviewer for so many years that no matter what their perspective, I was going to let them talk. I was not going to be out there ranting and raving about my own perspective.
I wanted to hear what they had to say. But I had no intention of doing that. What I had hoped to provide was a variety of discussion on the right to die, to hear what people believe, as far as that issue goes. I have had a beautiful marriage. It was so very sad. My daughter, who is a physician, told him we could keep him comfortable, but he said he did not want comfort. He was ready to die. Maryland did not, and does not, have medical aid in dying, and his doctor told him the only thing he could do was to stop eating, drinking water and taking medication.
I came in the next day, and honestly he looked wonderful; it was shocking. He told me that he had begun that process, and that he truly was ready. And then he fell asleep and never woke up. The 10 days or so before he decided to do that were sheer agony [because he had deteriorated so much]. I was so saddened and angry that he had to suffer when, had he lived in Oregon, he could have gone peacefully in his own time, with all of us there.
It was very hard, and that is how I got involved in the discussion around medical aid in dying. A few years after John died, Joe Fabb called me and said he was doing a film on the right to die. We spoke about his ideas, and he wanted me to be the narrator of the film.
I agreed to do it, and I am so glad I did. The whole team did a wonderful job on the film. I learned how strongly people felt about their right to die at the time of their own choosing, once they knew that their illness was terminal.
I talked to one woman who was only 37 years old, with breast cancer that had spread all over her body. She said she did not want her year-old to see her suffer. If you could assure me that all care would be fair and honest, he said, I would support [medical aid in dying].
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