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Margaret Bateman, 62, spent the final three years of her
life in pain, confined to bed and cared for by her
devoted husband. On October 20, just days before their
40th wedding anniversary, her husband Michael helped her
to end her life using helium inhalation.
Mr Bateman is happy he did the right thing: "What
I did for Margaret was morally right and correct. It's
what she wanted. It helped her out of her suffering. If
society chooses to lock me up then society needs jolting
around the issue of assisted suicide." He told police
that he did help his wife take her life but does not
believe he will be charged.
[Some notes on other topics are in the Notes section
below.]
[Note: Some other recent stories related to this topic
are in the Links: section below.]
[Note: there are stories in the Overflow: section
below.]
To read the full article click on one of these links, both of which go to the same destination. A short link is provided for the convenience of readers. Also, readers may search and browse past advisories on the web (see bottom.)
http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/Exclusive-Change-law-says-man.5859597.jp
Also see:
IT consultant accused of helping wife to die calls for Dignitas-style clinics in England
[Telegraph]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/lawandorder/6661450/IT-consultant-accused-of-helping-wife-to-die-calls-for-Dignitas-style-clinics-in-England.html
"I had to give up work to look after Margaret
full-time. The family were placed in an
intolerable situation. Margaret was going to
starve herself to death but she was threatened
with being taken into hospital and force-fed.
"What I did for Margaret was morally right and
correct. If society chooses to lock me up then
society needs jolting around the issue of assisted
suicide." Mr Bateman, who has recently been
diagnosed with spinal cancer, added that the
couple had even considered a trip to Dignitas but
were "prevented by circumstances", on which he did
not elaborate.
Widower speaks out over suicide
[Independent]
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/widower-speaks-out-over-suicide-1828772.html
A husband arrested on suspicion of helping his
bedridden wife kill herself shortly before their
40th wedding anniversary has defended his
decision, amid growing calls for a change in the
law on assisted suicide. The court heard that Mrs
Bateman's family had used the internet to research
suicide methods in the weeks before her death on
20 October. Her husband was subsequently arrested
on suspicion of aiding and abetting suicide, after
his wife was found dead at their home in Birstall,
West Yorkshire, with a plastic bag over her head
and helium pipes leading into it.
Robinson, Andrew. "Change law, says man who helped wife die". Yorkshire Post. Last Updated: 26 November 2009 9:07 AM. <www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/Exclusive-Change-law-says-man.5859597.jp>. Yorkshire Post Newspapers Ltd, PO Box 168 Wellington Street, Leeds LS1 1RF, UK
Tags (or keywords) briefly indicate some major topics of the report.
assisted suicide
helium
Britain
New date for Bill C-384 debate: According to Alex Schadenberg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (writing in LifeSiteNews) the new scheduled date for the debate on C-384 is Tuesday, February 2, 2010 with the vote taking place on February 3.
The case of Rom Houben deserves more coverage than I can find. Houben, a Belgian, was diagnosed as being in a vegetative state 23 years ago, but his doctors now believe he was conscious the whole time. There is more heat than light available on the Internet. Three overflow stories in this issue may be useful: Coma recovery case attracts doubters, Carte blanche, and Jacob M. Appel: The Rom Houben Tragedy and the Case for Active Euthanasia.
Stories that EuthaNEWSia did not get to:
Coma recovery case attracts doubters [The Associated
Press]
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hgsMsAOMKbccOJb8x-r1pkC1PPCQD9C7BE400
Two Associated Press medical writers review the case of
Rom Houben.
Carte blanche [The Blog of Jacqueline Jencquel]
http://www.wmaker.net/jencquel/Carte-blanche_a335.html
Jacqueline Jencquel links to a French-language interview
by the Belgian paper, lesoir.be, with Jacqueline
Herremans and Francois Damas. The machine translated
title is "The moving story of Rom Houben does not
challenge the law on euthanasia". A Google translation
into computer English is available at
http://tinyurl.com/yldb49y. Extract: Advances
in resuscitation are extraordinary and constant. But
doctors intensivists are aware that the consequences of
their exploits are often tragic for the patients
themselves and their families. Vegetative states would
not exist without the intensive care units that keep
alive the severely brain-damaged patients.
Jacob M. Appel: The Rom Houben Tragedy and the Case for Active Euthanasia
[Huffington Post]
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jacob-m-appel/the-rom-houben-tragedy-an_b_370032.html
What is clear is that, if there are truly more
locked-in patients than once believed, our society
must confront these unpleasant choices
directly. While we might ultimately decide to let
these patients live, even at the risk of allowing
them to suffer, we should recognize that such a
policy is neither obvious nor intuitive. Whatever
the truth of Rom Houben's case, it does not offer
any easy answer to these questions.
A case against euthanasia
[Mmegi Online, Botswana]
http://www.mmegi.bw/index.php?sid=2&aid=11&dir=2009/November/Thursday26
This is an OpEd piece by Botswanan Don-Martin
Takudzwa Whande, who adopts a straight Biblical
argument: "But nowhere does the Bible say
one should take his/her life, or assist a person
take his/her life because one has diseased feet or
is undergoing utter agony. That would simply
amount to suicide and murder which is against
God's commandment, 'Thou shall not kill'."
Death with dignity
[The Barrie Examiner, Canada]
http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2193202
Hospice Simcoe's new 10-bed facility, located at
336 Penetanguishene Rd., near Royal Victoria
Hospital, is set to officially open it's doors on
Dec. 1. It's the first residential hospice in the
county, and will accept palliative patients living
in Simcoe County or Muskoka from their teenage
years to senior years. It's been a two-year
project getting the building to this point, but
the house is finally ready to be home to residents
who don't want to die in hospital, but who can't
live out their days at home.
International Emmy win for Walters
[The Press Association]
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5jKgnb6RIHHDmuzWATeQRuKU6Z_ow
Veteran actress Julie Walters and up-and-coming
star Ben Whishaw took the top acting honours as
British talent dominated the International Emmys
awards. Mamma Mia! star Julie, 59, won the best
actress prize for assisted suicide drama A Short
Stay In Switzerland on the BBC, while 29-year-old
Ben landed the best actor gong for the
broadcaster's five-part drama Criminal Justice.
Eluana Englaro's Father Now Making Waves as a Euthanasia Activist
[LifeSiteNews.com]
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2009/nov/09112402.html
The father of Eluana Englaro (known in the press
as "Italy's Terri Shiavo"), Beppino Englaro, is
making a name for himself as a euthanasia
activist, and is continuing to claim justification
for his successful decade-long court battle to
have his daughter's food and hydration removed
last year.
Fighting for a peaceful, pain-free death
[Telegraph]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/6613732/Fighting-for-a-peaceful-pain-free-death.html
Jean is fearful of being put on the Liverpool
Care Pathway (LCP), a controversial NHS palliative
care programme for terminally-ill patients close
to death. The LCP, originally designed by the
cancer charity Marie Curie in the late Nineties to
ease the suffering of terminally ill patients at a
hospice in Liverpool, was approved by the National
Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) in 2004.
It has since been rolled out to nearly 1,000
hospitals, care homes and hospices in the UK."
"Dr Rob George, a consultant in palliative care
and clinical lead of London's End of Life Care
Project, which is working to improve care of the
dying in the capital, said that public fears were
based on misunderstanding.
Swiss establish "restrictions" on assisted suicide
[Onenewsnow.com]
http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=777772
Rita Marker, head of the International Task Force
on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide (ITF), reports
that this 'crack down' is not as serious as the
public may think.
Euthanasia supporters "hopeful" about bill
[ABC News, Australia]
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/11/20/2748408.htm
The President of WA's Voluntary Euthanasia
Society Ranjan Ray says he is hopeful but not
confident the bill will be passed. He says it is
only the first step. 'I'm hoping that it will
come to fruition because it's only the first
reading and we are hoping that the Premier will
show some leadership and allow time to debate the
bill,' he said.
The EuthaNEWSia ID for this advisory is: enid200911272627.
Mailed: Friday, November 27, 2009 15:06:02 -0600
at Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
EuthaNEWSia is a free Canadian news advisory service covering end-of-life issues such as right to die, assisted suicide, and euthanasia. EuthaNEWSia is produced by the Right to Die Society of Canada which works toward a good death for all, including open, regulated and equitable access to euthanasia and assisted suicide. The editor is Michael Dawson <editor@euthanewsia.ca>.
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