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Taking assisted suicide out of the criminal code in the Netherlands has created an “avalanche” of strict legal controls on how the Dutch can end their own lives with medical help, says a leading legal expert on euthanasia in Europe.

Dutch doctors who carry out assisted suicide face a deluge of official reviews and investigations that didn’t exist before the Netherlands legalized euthanasia in 2002, said John Griffiths, professor of sociology and law at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.

Griffiths, speaking at Carleton University at a conference on physician-assisted suicide, said every doctor carrying out an assisted suicide must consult with a second doctor as well as be green-lighted by an independent review committee. In 2005, that committee looked over
2,883 cases to ensure all required conditions were met, including “unbearable suffering.”

Griffiths said it’s “very difficult” to get euthanasia in the Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium or the U.S. state of Oregon, jurisdictions where it’s legal.

“You can only get it if you are considered better educated, more with it or a Sue Rodriguez type,” said Griffiths, referring to the B.C. woman who fought unsuccessfully to have Canada’s assisted-suicide law struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1993.

Opponents of the Dutch euthanasia law argue legalizing the right to die will prompt those who are elderly, poor and chronically ill to end their lives.

But in 2001, the overwhelming majority of the 3,800 Dutch people who had a doctor-assisted suicide were elderly, well-educated men in the final stages of cancer, said Griffiths, co-author of Euthanasia and the Law in the Netherlands.

“The whole question about discrimination against the vulnerable is, in practice, a non-issue,” said Griffiths.

Physician-assisted suicide has been legal in Oregon since 1997. According to the most recent statistics, 97% of those who took advantage of it were white, 92% had hospice care and 62% had some form of college education.

The Vermont House voted down an initiative Wednesday that would have given
terminally ill patients the ability to hasten their deaths with the help of
a physician.

After nearly four hours of sometimes emotional debate on the issue, members
of the House voted 82-63 against the proposal.

“In my view, (the bill) goes too far in enforcing one group’s preferences on
the traditional values of others,” said Rep. Harvey “Bud” Otterman,
R-Topsham.

Rep. William Aswad, D-Burlington, read a letter from a man who said he
wished his family had had the option when his father died a painful death
last year. The man urged Aswad to support the bill. “This letter cries out
for a `yes’ vote,” Aswad said. Continue Reading »

Assemblymember Patty Berg’s Compassionate Choices Act, legislation that
would allow terminally ill adults to accept life-ending drugs from a
physician, won the support of California’s largest physicians organization
this week.

The California Association of Physician Groups, which represents thousands
of doctors in more than 150 organized medical organizations, is one of the
largest of its kind in the nation. Continue Reading »

Terminally-ill woman wants right to die peacefully
Ningxia Hui, China

“I love life. But I don’t want to go on living.”

So writes 28-year-old Li Yan in her blog, which calls for the legalisation
of euthanasia.

Li, from Northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, has been
suffering from terminal cancer since she was just a year old. She has lost
the use of her limbs and can move only her head and fingers.

In her blog, Li calls on the NPC (The National People’s Congress) to
consider drafting a proposal on “peaceful dying”, or euthanasia, to look
at the benefits of legal suicide.

Her request became a media sensation after popular CCTV investigative news
anchor Chai Jing presented it at an NPC meeting. Continue Reading »

Vermont (USA) Right-to-die Bill advances out of committee

Friday Mar 15, 2007

The House Judiciary Committee voted 6-4 in favor of a bill that would
allow patients with terminal conditions with a prognosis of less than six
months to live to get a prescription to hasten their deaths. Another House
committee also has recommended the bill and it’s likely to be debated by
the full House by the middle of next week.

Woman’s voluntary death relaunches euthanasia debate in Spain

Granada, Spain – For more than two decades, Inmaculada Echevarria had
wanted to die.

The 51-year-old Spanish woman had suffered for 40 years from a muscular
dystrophy which gradually deprived her of all autonomy.

The disease forced her to give her son up for adoption after birth, and
left her bedridden for 20 years. Finally, she was only able to move her
facial muscles and fingertips.

When doctors disconnected Echevarria’s breathing machine in the southern
city of Granada on Wednesday evening, she undoubtedly passed away with a
sense of relief.

“To be free, you have to fight,” said Echevarria, who had defended her
right to die. Continue Reading »

Montpelier, Vt (USA) — The Vermont House Human Services Committee hearing continues on the recently reintroduced assisted-suicide bill (H.44).


Full text of House Bill 44 (H.44) introduced to The Vermont General Assembly is available at
http://www.leg.state.vt.us/docs/legdoc.cfm?URL=/docs/2008/bills/intro/H-044.HTM

Subject: Health; end of life; patient-directed dying
AN ACT RELATING TO PATIENT CHOICE AND CONTROL AT END OF LIFE

Statement of purpose: This bill proposes, subject to appropriate safeguards, to allow a mentally competent person diagnosed with less than six months to live to request a prescription which, if taken, would hasten the dying process.

There are five co-sponsors on the bill — two Democrats, a Republican, a Progressive and an independent. Continue Reading »

For those interested, besides the just released and previously mentioned 2006 report, other documents related to Oregon’s Death With Dignity (DWD) Act are available through the Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS) website (PDF reader not required to read most of the following documents): Continue Reading »

The State of Oregon’s “Death with Dignity” 2006 Annual Report is now up and available on the Oregon Department of Human Services website.

The Oregon Death With Dignity (DWD) Act is Oregon’s physician-assisted suicide (PAS) law, supported at the polls by a majority of Oregon voters twice, once in 1994 and again in 1997. The Oregon law was then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which upheld the law in a January 2006 landmark ruling.

Each year by directive of the state statute, the Oregon DHS provides a summary of the year’s activity under the “Death with Dignity” act (including the presentation of data in various statistical table formats). The DHS website also provides links to the portions of the report which remains stable year-to-year (for instance, the methods used to compile the data, the history of the DWD Act, etc.).

The formal announcement of the 2006 report is here: Continue Reading »

The American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM) board of directors approved an updated “physician-assisted death” policy statement on Feb.14, 2007

“The AAHPM takes a position of ‘studied neutrality’ on the subject of whether PAD (physician-assisted death) should be legally regulated or prohibited, believing its members should instead continue to strive to find the proper response to those patients whose suffering becomes intolerable despite the best possible palliative care.”

Full statement can be read at http://www.aahpm.org/positions/suicide.html

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