The continual expansion of euthanasia in the Netherlands and Belgium
By Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention CoalitionThe Washington Post has published a very well researched article by Charles Lane titled: Europe’s sinister expansion of euthanasia.
The article was republished in the National Post and several other major newspapers in Canada
Lane examined the date from the recent research concerning the Belgian euthanasia law. I have written similar articles, but to his credit, Lane has been published by major newspapers.
Lane first examines the data from a Study: concerning 100 requests for euthanasia for psychiatric reasons in Belgium.
Lane remarks that:
Between October 2007 and December
2011, 100 people went to a clinic in Belgium’s Dutch-speaking region
with depression, or schizophrenia, or, in several cases, Asperger’s
syndrome, seeking euthanasia. The doctors, satisfied that 48 of the
patients were in earnest, and that their conditions were “untreatable”
and “unbearable,” offered them lethal injection; 35 went through with
it.
These facts come not from a
police report but an article by one of the clinic’s psychiatrists, Lieve
Thienpont, in the British journal BMJ Open. All was perfectly legal
under Belgium’s 2002 euthanasia statute, which applies not only to
terminal physical illness, still the vast majority of cases, but also to
an apparently growing minority of psychological ones. Official figures
show nine cases of euthanasia due to “neuropsychiatric” disorders in the
two-year period 2004-2005; in 2012-2013, the number had risen to 120,
or 4 percent of the total.
… in the Netherlands, which
decriminalized euthanasia in 2002, right-to-die activists opened a
clinic in March 2012 to “help” people turned down for lethal injections
by their regular physicians. In the next 12 months, the clinic approved
euthanasia for six psychiatric patients, plus 11 people whose only
recorded complaint was being “tired of living,” according to a report in
the Aug. 10 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine.
If you find this sinister, I
agree. Bioethicists Barron H. Lerner and Arthur L. Caplan, who reviewed
the data from the Low Countries in JAMA Internal Medicine, observe that
the reports “seem to validate concerns about where these practices might
lead.”
Thienpont acknowledges that “the
concept of ‘unbearable suffering’ has not yet been defined adequately”
and that “there are no guidelines for the management of euthanasia
requests on grounds of mental suffering in Belgium.”
Yet she and her colleagues
continue to put the mentally ill to death, insisting that they are
respecting their wishes — though, as she writes, “further studies are
recommended.”
Lane then uses the example of Frank van den Bleeken.
Thienpont’s co-author Wim
Distelmans, a leading advocate of euthanasia, has ended the life of a
44-year-old who was anguished, but not terminally ill, due to a botched
sex-change operation. Distelmans also put to death identical 45-year-old
deaf twins who said they lost the will to live upon learning they would
eventually go blind.
Frank van den Bleeken, imprisoned
for 30 years for rape and murder, sought euthanasia from Distelmans,
citing his incurable violent impulses and the misery of life behind
bars. Belgian officials and Distelmans initially agreed; a lethal
injection the murderer might have gotten as punishment in the United
States would be supplied as therapy in anti-death penalty Europe.
In January, however, Distelmans
backed out just before the scheduled procedure— there was still hope for
van den Bleeken to get treatment at a facility in the Netherlands, he
said.
Distelmans faced little
accountability either way. The body empowered to scrutinize his actions,
after the fact, was Belgium’s Euthanasia Control and Evaluation
Commission — of which he is co-chairman. It has reviewed thousands of
cases since 2002 but referred exactly none to law enforcement.
The “very worrisome” trends in
Europe “should give us pause” about where the “assisted dying” movement
might lead in this country, Lerner and Caplan write.
To be sure, by authorizing
doctors to administer lethal drugs, in terminal and non-terminal cases,
the Benelux countries go far beyond laws in Oregon and four other
states, which permit physicians to prescribe, not administer, a fatal
dose — and only in cases of terminal physical illness.
Editor’s note. This appeared at alexschadenberg.blogspot.it.
Source: NRLC News
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