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Under a settlement reached in a federal lawsuit this week, terminally ill patients seeking physician-assisted death in Oregon are no longer required to be residents of the state.
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The lawsuit is believed to be the first in the nation to raise the question of whether such residency requirements are constitutional.
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Her revered public radio show is no longer on the air, but Diane Rehm keeps going and going. Before she left the NPR scene, she visited many stations to鈥
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Contemplating the end of life itself is an enormous task. And there's an additional degree of complexity when someone considers making use of an鈥
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For 20 years now, Oregon law has allowed people with terminal illnesses to get prescriptions for drugs to end their own lives. Other states have followed,鈥
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You've heard the line: only two things in life are sure--death and taxes. So those are the topics on this week's VENTSday.Let's get your thoughts on death鈥
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Diane Rehm's weekday talk show precedes the Exchange, but today (April 4), she's part of it. 2016 is a big year for the longtime radio host; she's鈥
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Lawmakers in California have passed a bill that would allow doctors to prescribe a fatal dose of medication to a terminally-ill patient who requests鈥
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The governor still needs to sign, but Oregon appears on its way to a "Right To Try" law.Meaning people with terminal illnesses will gain the right to try鈥
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The voice and face of Brittany Maynard put Oregon's assisted suicide law front and center once again. Maynard was just the latest in long line of people鈥