Assisted suicide promotion has led to more youth suicide in Australia
By Alex Schadenberg, International Chair – Euthanasia Prevention CoalitionPhilip Nitschke has been promoting assisted suicide for many years. Recent statistics from the Australian Bureau of Statistics indicates that Nitschke’s promotion of suicide techniques has led to many younger people dying by suicide.
The Sydney Morning Herald featured the story of Lucas Taylor (26) who died in 2012, after receiving suicide assistance from Nitschke and his group.
Judith Taylor, the mother of Lucas, told the Morning Herald:
Twenty-six-year-old Lucas Taylor
took his own life by taking Nembutal more than three years ago, but he
still gets Exit International’s email newsletter.
After his death in 2012 his
mother Judith went through his emails looking for answers and found he
had been a paid up member of the organization.
Mrs. Taylor said he used
knowledge gained on Exit International’s forums to obtain the drug from
Peru. He was not suffering from a terminal illness – although Mrs.
Taylor said he may have believed he was ill – and later used the drug to
take his own life in Germany.
She said the deaths among younger
people were an “unintended consequence” of the voluntary euthanasia
movement putting out information online on suicide methods.
“Coroners and authorities should
be sitting up taking notice of this,” she said of the data on the number
of deaths from Nembutal. “This is an international business.”
Nembutal is a euthanasia drug used by veterinarians.According the Sydney Morning Herald:
New data from the national
coronial information system shows 120 people died by taking Nembutal ..
between July 2000 and December 2012.
The deaths included one person under the age of 20, 11 people in their 20s and 14 people in their 30s.
Voluntary euthanasia campaigners
say the actual number of Nembutal deaths is even higher, as many deaths
are not reported to the coroner and people who use the drug to take
their lives take steps to make it look like the death is of natural
causes.
Nitschke is also fighting to keep his Australian medical license.
There have been 12 complaints to the Australian Medical Board concerning
Nitschke and his group Exit International.Judith Taylor submitted one of those complaints. Taylor told the Medical Board that:
her son had been coached in how to take his own life by forum members who exchanged information on the particulars.
There was no one present to urge
restraint or at least some second thoughts about the permanency of
suicide, other possible options and the fact that he would be wrapping
up his pain and passing it on to his family for the rest of their lives.
It is the worst of the worst. To
find your son has died is bad enough but to find out it was by his own
hand and then to find out there is an international business that
promotes it, coerces it and provides all the info was worse.
Nitschke has been promoting the use of veterinary euthanasia drugs
for many years. In June 2010, I commented on a study from Victoria
Australia that found:
… of the 51 people who were known
to have died from Nembutal, 6 people were in their 20’s, 8 people were
in their 30’s, 5 people were in their 40’s, 14 people were in their
50’s, 3 people in their 60’s, 10 in their 70’s, and 5 people were over
the age of 80.
… of the 38 known deaths that
were investigated by a coroner, only 11 had a significant physical
illness or chronic pain with the remaining 27 cases showing no signs of
physical problems.
The report suggested that the 27 otherwise healthy people who died from Nembutal use were most likely depressed or mentally ill.
Paul Russell, the director of HOPE, an organization devoted to
preventing euthanasia and assisted suicide, said the data was concerning
and something suicide prevention organizations should be heeding.
We need to find more effective ways of helping people [who] are feeling desperate from going to these clandestine organizations.
The fact is that Nitschke recklessly abandons vulnerable people who
deserve social, and psychological support, excellent care, effective
pain management and a caring community.Source: NRLC News
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