-------------------------------------------------------------
Corry den Ouden-Smit has summarized four stories from the Dutch right-to-die society's magazine Relevant:
Why do 92% of Dutch self-chosen medical deaths use euthanasia instead of the equally available assisted suicide?
Why did a wife have to threaten a hospital with legal action before they would respect the husband's Refusal of Treatment?
The Human Rights Committee of the United Nations is criticizing Dutch euthanasia for religious reasons.
Foreign speculation on Dutch ALS care is refuted
by study.
[Editor's note: EuthaNEWSia will appear
irregularly for the next two weeks. All the stories
will appear eventually, but many will be in the Overflow
section.]
[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.)
den Ouden-Smit, Corry. "Summaries of Relevant number 4, 2009". Relevant: Magazine of Right to Die-NL (NVVE). Accessed: Friday, December 18, 2009. <www.nvve.nl/nvve-english/pagina.asp?pagkey=140429>. NVVE, Right to Die-NL, PO BOX 75331, 1070 AH Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Copyright 2009 NVVE. Alle rechten voorbehouden.
Tags (or keywords) briefly indicate some major topics of the report.
assisted suicide
euthanasia
refusal of treatment
United Nations Human Rights Committee
NVVE, Right to Die - Netherlands
Netherlands
Stories that EuthaNEWSia did not get to:
Britain: Suicide pact man defends decision
[BBC News]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/somerset/8415986.stm
A terminally ill man from Somerset has
spoken about the failed suicide pact he made with
his wife. Dr Willie Stanton, 79, said he and his
wife Angela, 74, who was found dead at their home
in Westbury-sub-Mendip, did not want to be
separated. "What we did… was entirely
reasonable for two rational, non-religious people
who'd reached the end of their lives, which they'd
enjoyed so much", he said.
Belgium: Charges against GP dropped in Ostend deaths
[Expatica.com]
http://www.expatica.com/be/news/belgian-news/Charges-against-GP-dropped-in-Ostend-deaths_58715.html
A Bruges magistrate has thrown out a case
against a GP from Ostend who stood accused of
five-fold murder. The charges related to the
deaths of five demented patients. The GP faced
charges because he had administered morphine to
these five patients in his care…. The doctor's
lawyer told the VRT that the magistrate concluded
that the doctor had acted to alleviate pain. In
certain cases administering pain relief can have a
life-shortening effect, but the doctor's only
intention was to address the patients' pain.
[Thanks to
World right-to-die news list
for the alert on this story.]
India: Judges consider comatose rape victim's right to die
[Times Online]
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6960935.ece
Ms Virani wants the court to issue
instructions to "ensure that no food is fed", an
act that is at present outlawed. Previous pleas
for euthanasia on behalf of coma victims have been
rejected. However, while the Supreme Court
initially issued a notice stating that "under the
law of the country, we cannot allow a person to
die" it has since suggested that withholding food
from Ms Shanbaug might not be considered
euthanasia, since "her life is worse than animal
existence". It has ordered a medical evaluation of
her condition.
Australia: Net filters "thin end of the wedge": Kirby
[The Sydney Morning Herald]
http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/net-filters-thin-end-of-the-wedge-kirby-20091217-kym9.html
Former High Court judge Michael Kirby has
criticised the Federal Government's internet
censorship agenda … In an interview with Fairfax
Radio this morning, Kirby said some circles feared
the controversial policy would be "the thin end of
the wedge of the Government moving in to
regulating the actual internet itself". "Once you
start doing that you get into the situation of
Burma and Iran where the Government is taking
control of what people hear and what information
they get," he said, adding that Australia's
approach hadn't been attempted anywhere else in
the world.
Meanwhile, President of the Queensland
Council for Civil Liberties, Michael Cope, today
said the internet filter could threaten "the
search for truth, democracy, self realisation and
autonomy for individuals".
Most experts agree that Conroy's policy
will not result in any meaningful dent in the
availability of harmful internet content, will
create significant freedom of speech issues and
will be prone to abuse by politicians. Almost
20,000 people have voted in smh.com.au's poll on
internet censorship and 96 per cent of respondents
oppose the filters, which the Government itself
has admitted could be easily bypassed and do not
cover peer-to-peer, instant messaging or other
communications protocols. Nearly 120,000
Australians signed a petition against internet
censorship by online activist group GetUp.
Britain: Times euthanasia poll of MPs is "out of date"
[The Christian Institute]
http://www.christian.org.uk/news/times-euthanasia-poll-of-mps-is-out-of-date/
The Christian Institute says that the poll
reported in
Wednesday's
EuthaNEWSia was out of date at the time of
publication, because the survey was carried out in
June and July. And: The poll, reported by
The Times on its front page on Wednesday, was
commissioned by Dignity in Dying, a pro-euthanasia
organisation…. But since July several new
developments have come to light which may have
shifted opinion.
Netherlands: new book on history and practice of Euthanasia revives debate
[The World Federation of Right to Die Societies]
http://worldrtd.net/node/935
This is a better version of EuthaNEWSia's Dec. 3
story:
Euthanasia
law is no cure-all for Dutch doctors.
USA: New Final Exit Network's newsletter discusses law on helping to die
[Assisted-Suicide Blog, Derek Humphry]
http://assistedsuicide.org/blog/2009/12/16/new-final-exit-networks-newsletter-discusses-law-on-helping-to-die/
Derek Humphry writes: [,,.9]_For an update on the
legal position of the 8 volunteers of the Final
Exit Network facing prosecutions in Georgia and
Arizona read the December 09 issue, just out, of
the Final Exit Network's newsletter on the web at
this link:
http://www.finalexitnetwork.org/Newsletters-12-09-on/Final_Exit_Newsletter_Vol_6_No_1-3%20for%20Web.pdf.
Robert Rivas, the Network Legal Advisor, explains
that there is no legal precedent for the charges.
Britain: "My brother took his own life at Dignitas — his life was in torment"
[Times Online]
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/health/article6958188.ece
Lesley Close recounts the story of her musician
brother, John; his diagnosis of motor neuron
disease at age 53; and his resolve to end his life
at Dignitas when the disease progressed rapidly.
On the Monday morning Mr Close and family
members flew to Zurich. They were met at the
airport by Ludwig Minelli, founder of the clinic,
and driven by ambulance taxi to his home to
complete the paperwork, then on to the city centre
flat for the drugs to be administered. "At every
stage it was made clear that turning back was an
option…. "
Canada: Latimer leave approved with a reminder to follow rules
[CBC News]
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/saskatchewan/story/2009/12/16/sk-latimer-leave-parole-board-91216.html
Robert Latimer is getting an extended leave
from his halfway house in British Columbia, but
not without a chiding from the national parole
board. Latimer, 56, is the Saskatchewan man
convicted of second-degree murder for killing his
severely disabled daughter…. The parole board
said it had no concerns about Latimer being in the
community.
Britain: Assisted suicide: disabled should not be allowed legally to kill themselves
[Telegraph]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/lawandorder/6818636/Assisted-suicide-disabled-should-not-be-allowed-legally-to-kill-themselves.html
In a submission to a consultation on
relaxing the rules on assisted suicide - which
ends today - a coalition of five disabled groups,
said that "to see suicide as the right solution is
to abandon hope. Severely ill and terminally ill
people do no deserve society to give up on them."
The group, which is lead by Baroness Campbell,
accused others who were pushing for the change as
"seeking to change the law by the back door by
creating the impression that those who assist in a
suicide will be immune from prosecution".
Australia: Suicide pills for Christmas presents - Dr Philip Nitschke
[The Herald Sun]
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/national/suicide-pills-for-christmas-presents/story-e6frf7l6-1225811150633
The Herald Sun reports that Dr Philip Nitschke
said that:
A so-called "peaceful pill" is being
developed from Nembutal, a drug commonly used by
vets to put down animals, but not available to
humans in Australia. Instead, many elderly or
sick people are being forced to travel to Mexico,
where the drug is freely available. While the
present liquid form has an expiry date, Dr
Nitschke said the pill being developed could sit
for years and was easy to smuggle into the
country.
Australia: Doctors' group warns against suicide tablet
[ABC News]
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/12/16/2773057.htm
In current workshops, Dr Philip Nitschke is
discussing a new pill being developed overseas,
which can be reconstituted into a liquid which is
a fatal dose of medication. Medical
association president Dr Philip Morris says the
medication is dangerous. "The idea that the
medication might be taken by others, children …
it's a very dangerous medication that clearly
if you take a lot of it it can kill you," he said.
"The other problem of course is that if people are
choosing to do that then they may not have the
right dose so they may end up still alive but
severely brain damaged."
Australia: Euthanasia advocate backs "light" sentence
[ABC News, Australia]
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/12/16/2773599.htm
Maria Clark was given a two-year wholly
suspended sentence for choking her comatose mother
in a Ballarat nursing home, in central Victoria,
last December. In sentencing, Justice Lex Lasry
said Clark sought to end her mother's suffering.
Dr Nitschke, who heads the organisation Exit
International, says he wishes politicians would
show as much compassion as the courts. "Well I
think it's another example where the courts are
acting compassionately in a situation where the
law really gives little leeway or flexibility," he
said.
Switzerland: New Dignitas premises approved
[World Radio Switzerland]
http://worldradio.ch/wrs/news/wrsnews/new-dignitas-premises-approved.shtml?17171
A court has decided that Dignitas may use its new
premises in the canton of Wetzikon, near Zurich,
to operate its clinic. Local officials had
refused permission on the grounds that the
operation of the clinic would cause harm to the
community.
West Virginia: Neighbor says homicide, suicide victim was "despondent"
[WVVA]
http://www.wvva.com/global/story.asp?s=11675062
According to Beckley Police, an 80-year-old
male took the life of his wife Monday morning then
committed suicide. The incident reportedly
occurred on Tolley Drive in the Maxwell Hill area
of Beckley. Neighbors say the wife was diagnosed
with Alzheimer's and the strain of caring for her
became too much for her husband.
"Mercy killing" father given lenient sentence
[The China Post]
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/national/national-news/2009/12/13/236288/Mercy-killing.htm
A father, surnamed Yen, 57, was given two years
and six months for strangling his 21-year-old son,
who had been rejected by a home for the
mentally challenged because of his violent
behavior and incapability of taking care of
himself. According to the report, last year the
father reasoned that he and his wife were ageing
and could not be around to take care of the son
for long. After their death, no one would take
care of the son. The father then killed the son
and turned himself in to police.
UK: Assisted suicide should never be just another choice
[Daily Mail]
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/columnists/article-1235351/Assisted-suicide-just-choice.html
Vince Cable, Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman,
states his opposition to assisted suicide.
The EuthaNEWSia ID for this advisory is: enid200912187387.
Mailed: Friday, December 18, 2009 14:49:18 -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>.
-------------------------------------------------------------
EuthaNEWSia mailing list
euthanewsia-subscribe@euthanewsia.ca
SUBJECT and TEXT may be left blank
euthanewsia-unsubscribe@euthanewsia.ca
SUBJECT and TEXT may be left blank
-------------------------------------------------------------
leave a comment on the Editor's Blog
see the recent headlines on the front page at www.euthanewsia.ca
subscribe to the RSS News feed. More information is on the Subscribe page.
search the advisories on the search page.
browse past stories on the past stories page.
Problems? Send an email to: editor@euthanewsia.ca