Theo Boer: California Governor should have talked to Holland before signing bill
By Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
Prof. Theo Boer
Boer argues that California Governor Jerry Brown should have talked to Holland before he signed the assisted suicide bill. Boer wrote:
Now that Gov. Jerry Brown has
signed the End of Life Option Act, my thoughts go back more than 20
years to the early days of assisted dying in the Netherlands. And I
can’t help but feel we — the Dutch — were naïve on this issue.
In 1994, the Dutch were the first
in the world to officially legalize assisted dying. It was a modest
beginning, just as California’s is now. With no country going before us,
assisted dying was formalized in a special clause in the Burial and
Cremation Act. If a number of safeguards were kept, doctors acting in
accordance with them would not be prosecuted. A separate euthanasia law
followed in 2001, not differing much from the 1994 clause and with
Belgium following its northern neighbour in 2002.
Five regional review committees,
consisting of a lawyer, a physician and an ethicist, keep an eye on the
practice and assess whether each case of assisted dying has been in
accordance with the law. I served on one of the committees from
2005-2014 and reviewed around 4,000 cases. Given the widespread support
for assisted dying in the Netherlands, I was convinced that legalizing
assisted dying was the wisest and most respectful route.
Boer explains what happened to the culture in the Netherlands:
In the first 13 years following
1994, the Netherlands seemed to have found the means to organize
assisted dying. Then, for unknown reasons, the numbers started going up,
year after year, from 2007 on. It was as if the country had needed the
first decade to get used to the whole idea of an organized death.
In the years of my membership,
the review committee saw a rise in the number of reports from 1,800 to
close to 5,500 last year. Now about one in 25 deaths in the Netherlands
is the consequence of assisted dying with, by the way, suicide rates
going up as well.
Boer then discussed how euthanasia has become common:
Whereas assisted dying in the
beginning was the odd exception, accepted by many — including myself —
as a last resort, it is on the road to becoming a preferred, if not the
only acceptable, mode of dying in the case of cancer. Public opinion has
shifted dramatically toward considering assisted dying a patient’s
right and a physician’s duty. A law that is now in the making obliges
doctors who refuse to approve assisted dying to refer their patients to a
willing colleague. Pressure on doctors to conform to patients’ or
relatives’ wishes can be intense.
Other developments have taken
place as well. The Dutch Right to Die Society founded a network of
traveling euthanizing doctors, thus taking assisted dying out of the
patient-doctor relationship. There is a strong public movement toward
legalizing euthanasia for children 1 to 11 years of age. Whereas in the
first years hardly any patients with psychiatric illnesses or dementia
appear in reports, these numbers are now sharply on the rise. Cases have
been reported in which a large part of the suffering of those given
assisted dying consisted of being aged, lonely or bereaved.
Hearing of Brown’s decision, and
without doubting any of his good intentions, my thoughts go back to our
own pioneering years. As I said, I think we have been naïve.
The Dutch and Belgian examples
show that a law that makes possible an assisted death may well create
its own dynamics. Clearly the “supply” of assisted dying creates new
“demand.” Right to die advocates see the Dutch law not as a respectful
compromise but as a first step toward more radical rights, such as a
lethal pill for anyone over 70. The Dutch Right to Die Society now
offers course material to high schools, where my teenage kids go,
intended to broaden their support for euthanasia as a normal death. This
would be unthinkable were it not for the existence of the present law.
Of course, I, too, know of
exceptional cases that may justify a decision to shorten a patient’s
life. But I am no longer convinced that a law is the best way to deal
with such cases. The governor might have visited the Netherlands first,
before signing the act.
Source: NRLC News
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