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posted by fyngyrz on Monday April 16 2018, @06:03AM   Printer-friendly
from the and-thanks-for-all-the-fish dept.

Submitted via IRC for fyngyrz

Euthanasia advocate displays 'Sarco', a pod that fills with nitrogen, which he hopes will one day be available as a 3D-printable device

[...]

Called the "Sarco", short for sarcophagus, the 3D-printed machine invented by Australian euthanasia activist Philip Nitschke and Dutch designer Alexander Bannink comes with a detachable coffin, mounted on a stand that contains a nitrogen canister.

"The person who wants to die presses the button and the capsule is filled with nitrogen. He or she will feel a bit dizzy but will then rapidly lose consciousness and die," said Nitschke. The Sarco was a device "to provide people with a death when they wish to die," Nitschke said.

Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/apr/15/nitschke-suicide-machine-amsterdam-euthanasia-funeral-fair


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by zocalo on Monday April 16 2018, @10:57AM (1 child)

    by zocalo (302) on Monday April 16 2018, @10:57AM (#667570)
    That actually does make some sense. The issue is that many countries have legislation concerning assisted suicide, specifically that they can (and will) prosecute any friends and family that assisted the deceased in a suicide bid, and selling suicide booths (or lethal medication kits, etc.) falls under the same legislation. This is why many people in Europe with terminal illnesses travel to countries like Switzerland that don't have such legal issues to die rather than continue to suffer under a futile palliative care programme. 3D printing your own (or just repurposing some other suitably airtight casket - I'd argue that if you are still mentally competent enough to make an informed decision on suicide you'd be able to figure that out too) means that you can do the entire thing on your own, with no additional messy legal legacies for friends and family to deal with once you're gone.
    --
    UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
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  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Monday April 16 2018, @02:06PM

    by Immerman (3985) on Monday April 16 2018, @02:06PM (#667628)

    I've got to agree with the GP that 3D printing is entirely extraneous. Perhaps a bit of buzzword publicity. The hardest part of the whole procedure is likely to be getting a canister of nitrogen, once you have that and an oxygen mask you're good to go. Or ditch the oxygen mask for a bag over your head - all you need is a confined volume in which you can easily displace the oxygen with slightly over-pressure nitrogen, for long enough to ensure you die after loosing consciousness, since waking up with severe brain damage from non-lethal oxygen deprivation is unlikely to be a satisfying conclusion.

    I'm disappointed that the article chose to include a photo of a man in a VR headset rather than of the actual booth - because it seems to me the one thing a booth could actually offer over a DIY solution is a pleasant setting for your transition.