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The ultimate \’how-to\’ guide book

Author Derek HumphryAvailable at www.finalexit.org/ergo store

In paperback or digital download

A German lawyer and politician has unveiled Europe’s first suicide machine for people with a death wish as “an act of Christian love”. The machine that can be rented and is then collected to be re-used by other clients kills painlessly at the push of a button.

It was unveiled by Dr Roger Kusch, 53, head of a suicide assistance society in Germany, who said: “Press one button, and seconds later death arrives. “The machine, which is smaller than the size of a shoebox, and is painted green, involves the user putting a needle in a vein and the machine does the rest at the touch of a button.”

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Two weeks ago the leader of the right to life movement in Oregon attacked in the Register-Guard (Eugene) the Oregon Death With Dignity Act, which permits physician-assisted suicide, on the grounds that in 2007 not a single patient who wanted a hastened death had been sent for psychological evaluation. The law says this must be done if the two approving doctors detect clinical depression.

These two letters appeared in response in the paper dated 10 April 2008:_

Life-ending decision is personal

After reading Gayle Atteberry’s guest viewpoint on Oregon’s physician assisted suicide act (Register-Guard, March 28), her last sentence — “The facts are now conclusive: Oregon’s assisted suicide experiment has failed the very patients it was intended to serve” — seems to me to be the rantings of a frustrated ideologue.

You’ll notice through the entire column, no actual numbers of assisted deaths were mentioned. That’s because there were fewer than 50 for the state’s entire population in 2006.

Throughout the column, she kept mentioning that these people were never referred to a psychiatrist for depression. Why on earth would someone close to death, dying of an excruciatingly Continue Reading »

Hillary Clinton told the editorial board of the Eugene Register-Guard

Q: What’s your attitude toward Oregon’s assisted suicide law?

A: I believe it’s within the province of the states to make that decision. I commend Oregon on this count, as well, because whether I agree with it or not or think it’s a good idea or not, the fact that Oregon is breaking new ground and providing valuable information as to what does and doesn’t work when it comes to end-of-life questions, I think, is very beneficial.

Q: Would you have voted for it if you were a resident of the state?

A: I don’t know the answer to that. I have a great deal of sympathy for people who are in difficult end-of-life situations. I’ve gone to friends who have been in great pain and suffering at the end of their lives. I’ve never been personally confronted with it but I know it’s a terribly difficult decision that should never be forced upon anyone. So with appropriate safeguards and informed decision-making, I think it’s an appropriate right to have.

Excerpt from Hillary Clinton’s conversation with the Register-Guard
Editorial Board (Eugene, OR – 04/05/08) –

http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/dt.cms.support.viewStory.cls?cid=89060&sid=4&fid=1

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A severely disfigured French woman, found dead
this month after a court rejected her request for euthanasia, took a
lethal overdose of barbiturates, a prosecutor said on Thursday.

Former schoolteacher Chantal Sebire, 52, suffered from a rare and
incurable tumour which severely deformed her face and caused her to lose
the sense of smell, taste and finally her eyesight.

Her body was found at her home in Plombieres-les-Dijon on March 19, two
days after the high court in the eastern French city of Dijon decided
current French law did not allow her doctor to prescribe her lethal drugs.

“The tests conducted reveal the presence in the blood of a toxic
concentration of barbiturate, Pentobarbital,” prosecutor Jean-Pierre
Alacchi told reporters in Dijon.

“The concentration found is three times the lethal level for this
product,” he said, adding that investigators were working to establish
how Sebire obtained the drug, which is not delivered by French pharmacies.

The drug Pentobarbital is commonly used for animal euthanasia and can be
legally prescribed for assisted human suicide in Switzerland, Belgium
and the US state of Oregon.

[Further info on Pento. in the book ‘Final Exit’ – paperback or download]]

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The hardcopy paperback ‘Final Exit’ 3rd edition by Derek Humphry touched the 5,061 mark in Amazon.com’s sales listing today.
You can download an even more up-to-date digitized edition at www.finalexit.org/ergo-store

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Terminally-ill patients in the Netherlands increasingly receive drugs to render them unconscious until death,
according to a study that suggests people are substituting deep sedation for legal euthanasia.

The researchers found that 1,800 people — 7.1 percent of all deaths in the Netherlands in 2005 — were drugged into so-called continuous deep sedation shortly before dying. This compares with 5.6 percent of cases in 2001.

At the same time, the use of euthanasia fell from 2.6 percent of all deaths to 1.7 percent, representing a decrease of 1,200 cases, the
researchers reported in the British Medical Journal on 21 March 2008.

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The simultaneous deaths of the writer Hugo Claus in Belgium and Chantal Sébire in France are a demonstration that our goal is not the choice between life and death,but between 2 different ways of dying.

Hugo Claus was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and decided to leave on his own terms at the moment he chose and before losing his mind. He was lucid and serene at the moment of his death.This is possible in Belgium,The Netherlands,Switzerland and Luxemburg.

Chantal Sébire had to suffer and show her poor, bruised face to the world because she wanted to help change the law in France….She could have died peacefully and surrounded by her family instead of having all this mediatic coverage at the end and suffering intolerable pain –physical and moral.

Anyone who would have taken the time to imagine what it must have felt like to be in her condition,would not have dared express the lack of empathy some of our ministers did.

Fortunately we have Bernard Kouchner ,who is a doctor,who was Health Minister under François Mitterrand before he was asked to become Nicolas Sarkozy’s Foreign Minister.He made a very clear statement yesterday in favour of a debate and in favour of helping Chantal Sébire to leave this life with no further suffering.

Robert Badinter, a prominent French intellectual, who also was a minister and thanks to whom the death penalty was prohibited in France also openly supports our cause. Eric Besson,Secretary of State for evaluation of public politics and digital economy,is also in favour of a debate to change the Léonetti law.He allowed me to write on his website:les-progressistes.fr.

Jean- Luc Romero,president of ADMD France,assisted by his team and mainly by Gilles Antonowicz,his legal advisor and Claudine Lassen,his medical advisor ,is relentlessly working towards a change in this very incomplete law ,which “allows “ a patient to die(meaning removing life-supporting techniques and letting the patient die of hunger and thirst)but does not allow a doctor to prescribe the pentothal sodium which ensures a fast and painless death.

Both methods are active euthanasia since both lead to death…..Only one is slow and painful and the other fast,painless and dignified. I am optimistic and I trust we will soon be witnessing change in France.

————-Jacqueline Jencquel, Paris, France

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The New York Times health section carried this article on 18 March 08:

Terminal Options for the Irreversibly Ill, By JANE E. BRODY

My Feb. 5 column, “A Heartfelt Appeal for a Graceful Exit,” prompted a deluge of information and requests for information on how people too sick to reap meaningful pleasure from life might be able to control their death.

Many seeking such control are take-charge people who consider quality of life more important than quantity. They do not want their hard-earned money squandered on costly, yet hopeless, treatments. They do not want to keep their bodies alive when their minds have died. They do not want to die under circumstances they consider inhumane, hooked up to all sorts of medical apparatus, unable to control bodily functions or to communicate with loved ones.

The desire to hasten death is not uncommon among the terminally ill. In a 1995 study of 200 such patients, 44 percent occasionally wished for death soon, although only 9 percent expressed “a serious and pervasive wish to die.”

As of this writing, Oregon is the only state that allows doctors to assist in the death of terminally ill patients. But as was apparent from the many e-mail messages and letters I received, not all who wish to dictate when they will take their last breath would be considered terminally ill, likely to die within six months. Some are terminally unable to enjoy life because of incurable, progressive or incapacitating ailments like metastatic cancer; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig’s disease; and advanced cases of Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis or emphysema. Some are looking down the tunnel of ever-worsening dementia and want to leave while they have something to say about it.

For example, a doctor wrote about a patient hospitalized with an advanced case of the autoimmune disease scleroderma. The man, who was being treated with high doses of prednisone, could barely swallow and viewed the quality of his life as so minimal that he no longer wanted to live. The day after his son’s bar mitzvah, he said it was time for him “to leave this earth,” and he refused any further treatment. A psychiatrist attested to the fact that the man was not depressed but was merely tired of living in such a debilitated state. The request to terminate treatment was honored; the man soon died.

Not Always So Simple

If only it were always so simple. Patients in nursing homes, for example, often come up against “house rules” that insist upon artificial nutrition and hydration for those who stop eating and drinking. Hospitalized or home-bound patients who ask their doctors to help them die, either by stopping treatment or by supplying a lethal dose of medication, typically confront a stone wall.

Most doctors see themselves as forces of life, not death. And the fear of prosecution among those who might otherwise be willing to supply patients with lethal doses of sedatives, however gradually, is all too realistic.

A 62-year-old woman wrote that her 90-year-old mother told her almost daily that she had “had enough”; she has had a good life but now no longer feels her life is worth living. She constantly asks her son-in-law, a physician, “Isn’t there something you can give me to help me get out of here already?”

“In this world of modern technology,” her daughter wrote, “where medical advances now provide the ability to keep individuals alive indefinitely, frequently without consideration for the quality of that life, I believe the time has come to address the issue of what you refer to as a ‘graceful exit.’ ”

Two prominent organizations that respond to those who face end-of-life issues, including a desire to hasten their own deaths — Compassion & Choices and Final Exit Network — are different in philosophical approach and the services they provide.

Compassion & Choices (www.compassionandchoices.org) has regional teams throughout the country. The central office in Denver, at (800) 247-7421, can direct callers to the nearest team.

As described by Judith Schwarz, a registered nurse and clinical coordinator for Compassion & Choices of New York, people seeking assistance are visited by a trained volunteer, who reviews a variety of end-of-life options, including obtaining adequate treatment for poorly controlled symptoms, perhaps through hospice care.

The organization “does not advertise and has no agenda,” Dr. Schwarz said in an interview, adding, “We don’t pressure or suggest, merely provide information.”

When mentally competent, terminally ill and suffering patients are certain about their desire to hasten death and their families are not opposed, the route often suggested is to stop eating and drinking, both naturally and artificially. There are no legal or moral obstacles to this route, which most often results in a peaceful death within two weeks. It also gives patients an unrushed opportunity to say their goodbyes or to change their minds about dying before it is too late.

Ending What Sustains Life

In their thorough and compassionate book on end-of-life options, “To Die Well,” Dr. Sidney Wanzer and Dr. Joseph Glenmullen of Harvard University Health Services, note that refusal of hydration is faster and less distressing than starvation in hastening death.

Dr. Schwarz pointed out that 1.3 million people die each year in American hospitals “as a consequence of someone’s decision to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment.” Patients can refuse unwanted treatment if they are mentally competent, or a health care agent can make the request for them if the patients had previously completed a living will and health care proxy.

If the doctor in charge refuses to cooperate, the patient or health care agent can request a transfer to another doctor who would be willing to support the patient’s choice.

An oft-used route for patients with intolerable pain or anxiety near the end of life is the use of high doses of opiates to reduce suffering, which can hasten death from respiratory suppression. A 1997 Supreme Court decision, Vacco v. Quill, suggested that this practice was lawful if the primary purpose was to relieve suffering.But amassing adequate doses of sedatives, once popular among patients seeking to hasten their death, is now rarely a viable option since doctors who prescribe them often or in large amounts for particular patients risk prosecution by the Drug Enforcement Agency. The method is limited to those able to swallow dozens of pills within a few minutes.

Dr. Wanzer and Dr. Glenmullen devote a chapter to the use of helium, an especially rapid method of ending life promoted by the Final Exit Network. Like Compassion & Choices, which provides all kinds of help for people nearing the end of life, the network relies on trained volunteers, but it is limited to helping suffering individuals hasten their own deaths.

The network’s Exit Guide program accepts members with various incurable diseases that cause intolerable suffering. Members must be “cognitively functional,” “physically strong enough to perform the required tasks” and “able to procure” the needed items.

Helium, when inhaled in place of oxygen, results in a loss of consciousness within a minute and heart stoppage in 15 minutes without causing the unpleasant sensation of air hunger, the authors reported. For further information about the network: www.finalexitnetwork.org or (800) 524-3948.
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Read the book ‘Final Exit’ 3rd edition with 2010 Addendum
from ERGO Bookstore — www.finalexit.org/ergo-store

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PARIS (Reuters) – A woman suffering from an incurable and disfiguring cancer failed on Monday (17 Mar) in her bid to set a legal precedent in France for patients seeking medical help to end their own lives.

A court in the eastern city of Dijon ruled that Chantal Sebire, 52, could not have a doctor help her die because it would breach both the code of medical ethics and the law, under which assisted suicide is a crime.

“Ms Sebire’s request, which is understandable in human terms, cannot succeed in law,” the court said in its ruling.

“While Ms. Sebire’s physical deterioration deserves compassion, under French law the judge must reject the request.”

Although active euthanasia is illegal in France, a 2005 law allows doctors to withhold treatment with a patient’s consent in certain circumstances.

Sebire, whose face is painfully bloated and distorted by the rare tumor growing in her sinuses, sought permission for assisted suicide in the hope of establishing a precedent.

The case has renewed the euthanasia debate in France. More than 2,000 doctors and nurses signed a petition last year saying they had helped patients to die and appealing for a change in the law to allow euthanasia.

Sebire’s doctors say she would fall into a coma and die if she stopped taking medication to deal with the rare tumor, but she insisted on going to court to try to secure the right to an assisted suicide.

Active euthanasia is legal in the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Luxembourg, but French courts regularly rule against doctors who administer lethal drugs to end life, although they are usually spared prison.

Opponents of euthanasia, including the Roman Catholic Church, say the sanctity of life overrides all other factors. Many also say a right to kill patients could easily be abused.

Sebire said she may now seek an assisted suicide elsewhere.

“I simply wanted to show that I was fighting to raise awareness, and in this fight I followed the law to the end,” she told France 5 television on Sunday.

“I now know how to obtain what I need, and if I cannot obtain it in France, I will obtain it elsewhere.”
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