Swiss Suicide case is only part of the assisted suicide debate.
By Alex Schadenberg, executive directorEuthanasia Prevention Coalition
The media is promoting the sad story of Susan Griffiths, a Winnipeg Manitoba woman who decided to die at the Dignitas suicide clinic in Switzerland. Griffiths has Multiple System Atrophy, a condition that will leave her significantly disabled before she dies.
I understand the feelings that Griffiths has and I understand her fear of living with disabilities, but her condition and her story are only part of the assisted dying debate and her condition is not a reason to legally permit physicians to lethally inject or to prescribe suicide for their patients.
Legalizing Euthanasia and/or assisted suicide (assisted death) would permit, in law, one group of people (usually physicians) to have the right to kill another group of people, their patients, or other people whose lives are deemed to be not worth living.
The law is designed to protect people. Every nation has laws that protect people from homicide (murder) and nearly every nation has laws that protect people from other people assisting their suicide. These are good laws because they protect people, in their time of need.
We oppose assisted death because it is not safe to give one person the right in law, to kill or be involved with killing another person. Abuse will occur and some doctors will cause deaths without request or act outside of the law. The only question is how many deaths without request are considered acceptable within a society?
In jurisdictions where assisted death have been legalized, some people have been killed without consent and others have been coerced, by others, to “choose” to die.
In Switzerland, where Griffiths has chosen to die, the assisted death law lacks effective safeguards to protect people from abuse. Further to that, the Dignitas suicide clinic that Griffiths has chosen to die at has been implicated for significant abuse.
In Belgium and the Netherlands where assisted death is legal with “safeguards,” studies have proven that the safeguards are often ignored, that the law is abused, and people are dying without request.
Three recent studies concerning the practice of assisted death in the Flanders Region of Belgium found the following results:
1. That of the 208 assisted deaths that were identified from a questionnaire that examined 3,623 deaths, 66 (or 32%) of the assisted deaths were done without explicit request.
The same study found that the assisted deaths that were done without explicit consent tended to be done to a person who was over the age of 80, who did not have cancer, and who died in the hospital. This study concluded that:
“this demographic fit the description of a vulnerable patient group at risk of life-ending without request.”
2. The second study examined the same data from the 3623
questionnaires but looked at how often the assisted deaths were
reported. This study found that only 52.8% of the assisted deaths were
reported. This is significant because the Belgian law requires that all
assisted deaths must be reported. This study concluded that:
“As such legislation alone does not
seem sufficient to reach the goal of transparency (total or 100%
transparency seems to be a rather utopian ideal).”
3. A third study examined the role of nurses in physician-assisted
deaths in Belgium. The study questionnaires to 1,678 nurses and received
1265 completed questionnaires. From the data, the researchers
determined that 248 nurses had been recently involved with an assisted
death.120 of those assisted deaths (45%) were done without explicit
request.This study also determined that 14 of the nurses admitted to carrying out the assisted death, even though Belgian law specifically forbids nurses from so doing . To make matters worse, of the 14 assisted deaths that the nurses admitted to doing, on two occasions the nurse admitted to doing it without consulting the physician.
It must be noted that there has never been an attempted prosecution for abusing the Belgian euthanasia law.
The study concluded that:
“It seems that the current law (which
does not allow nurses to administer the life-ending drugs) and a
control system do not prevent nurses from administering life-ending
drugs.”
In the Netherlands, euthanasia is out-of-control. Even thought the
Dutch government has attempted to control the euthanasia law, the number
of unreported euthanasia deaths increased between 2005-2010.To learn more about the current practise and abuses of the Belgium and Netherlands Euthanasia law, by ordering the book, by Alex Schadenberg ($20 includes shipping): Exposing Vulnerable People to Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.
Some people suggest that since Oregon’s assisted suicide law does not allow euthanasia and appears to have tighter restrictions than the Belgian and Netherlands laws, it is possible to legalize an “Oregon style” of assisted suicide without fear of abuse. But Oregon’s assisted suicide law is not without abuse or problems.
Barbara Wagner had recurrent lung cancer and was prescribed Tarceva, a more aggressive form of treatment. The Oregon health plan denied her treatment for her cancer but offered her assisted suicide instead. This story is not about the willingness of the state to provide aggressive forms of medical treatment, but rather it is about a state that steers its citizens to assisted suicide.
Jeanette Hall, an Oregon resident, was diagnosed with terminal cancer. She decided that she wanted to die by assisted suicide. Instead, Hall’s physician convinced her to try a few treatment options. This is what she recently wrote:
In 2000, I was diagnosed with cancer and told that I had six months to a year to live. I knew that our law had passed, but I didn’t know exactly how to go about doing it. I did not want to suffer, and I did not want to do radiation. I wanted Stevens to help me, but he didn’t really answer me.
Instead, he encouraged me to not give up and ultimately I decided to fight the cancer. I had both chemotherapy and radiation. I am so happy to be alive!
It is now 12 years later. If Stevens had believed in assisted suicide, I would be dead. I thank him and all my doctors for helping me choose “life with dignity.”
This is not about the proficiency of the safeguards, but rather how legalizing assisted suicide leads to some people, who are experiencing depression or acting out of fear, to give up on life prematurely.
Which leads us to the study by Linda Ganzini concerning depression and assisted suicide in Oregon. Ganzini examined 58 people who requested assisted suicide in Oregon. She found that 15 of them were depressed or experiencing feelings of extreme hopelessness.
It is significant that of the 15 people who were diagnosed as depressed, three of them died by assisted suicide but none of them was offered a psychiatric evaluation by their doctor. The Oregon law requires a doctor who suspects that a patient is depressed or experiencing emotional or mental difficulties should be sent for a psychological evaluation. Of the 77 assisted suicide deaths in 2012, only two of them were sent for a psychological evaluation.
An Oregon physician recently wrote about how his depressed patient, died by assisted suicide.
The final concern about assisted death laws is the lack of transparency to protect people who die outside of the prescribed “safeguards” of the law. A recent letter by Isaac Jackson, an attorney in Oregon, proves that the assisted suicide law is unsafe. Jackson wrote:
I am a lawyer in Oregon who specializes in injury claims including wrongful death cases. I understand that Montana will be considering assisted suicide legislation this session. I write to inform your readers that Oregon’s assisted suicide law lacks transparency. Even law enforcement is denied access to information collected by the State. Moreover, this is official state policy.
In 2010, I was retained by a client whose father had died under our assisted-suicide act. Unlike other deaths I have investigated, it was difficult to get basic information.
After I wrote the state epidemiologist, I received a letter from the Attorney General’s Office that the agency charged with collecting assisted-suicide data, the Oregon Health Authority, “may only make public annual statistical information.” The letter also referred me to the Oregon Medical Board and law enforcement.
The Board wrote me that there could be no investigation without an allegation of misconduct against a physician. At my request, a police officer was assigned to the case. Per his confidential report, the Oregon Health Authority would neither confirm nor deny that my client’s father had died under our act. Per the report, the officer did, however, talk to the doctor signing the death certificate who said that he did not know that the death had involved assisted-suicide. The death certificate listed the immediate cause of death as “cancer” and the manner of death as “natural.”
Per the report, the officer also spoke with potential perpetrators who assured him that the death had been voluntary. He closed the case.
Without transparency our law is not safe.
In conclusion legalizing euthanasia and or assisted suicide (assisted death) gives physicians the power, in law, to directly and intentionally cause or be involved with, causing the death of their patients. It is not safe.
In jurisdictions where assisted death has been legalized, abuses have occurred and in many circumstances the safeguards in the law have been ignored.
I argue that abuse of the law is not due to ineffective safeguards, but is more connected to the fact that some people will always follow the rules of the law, some people will sometimes follow the rules of the law, and some people will rarely follow the rules of the law.
Legalizing assisted death is not safe and will never be safe. Countries need to protect their citizens by maintaining their laws that protect people from euthanasia and assisted suicide
Source: NRLC News
1 comment:
This is absurd. You comment how you understand the fear of living with a disability as if that was some justification - then blow past her choices to give the usual (really bad research and stats) before talking about terminal cancer.
Except the problem in this case isn't the 'safeguards' but the choices of Susan Griffiths, who is worried that she might be disabled and need assistance by her mid 80's due to this disease. How is that like palliative cancer? Her choices, including avoiding legally killing herself (which is not a crime in Canada) are the problem in this case. And she isn't depressed - she had several parties the last week, and then walked around through the snow to tell all her neighbors she was off to die.
Perhaps if someone 'thought' they had cancer, and then a doctor helped them have assisted suicide BEFORE even a diagnosis was concluded, there would be a comparison - but there isn't. Pleaes stop throwing blind stats against a wall and let the people making the choices be responsible for the choices.
Also, if you are of interest, I can tell you why the doctor listed the death as 'natural' - your confusion seems to indicate that you don't actually have much experience with palliative diseases or older people in government homes. The problem isn't a future where doctors have the power of life and death - you should start looking at the doctors who sign regular certificates and then find out what kind of practice they have. Or for that matter, look up basic things like the recent report on the widespread use of chemical restraint by doctors on 1 in 4 individual in care homes (1 in 2 where I live) to keep them from making decisions. Physican assisted deaths are so common as to be part of the system - it is only giving the patient a voice which is unique.
Post a Comment