Dutch groups want to expand assisted suicide rights

Description: [of the article from Deutsche Welle]

The Netherlands is one of a handful of countries where very ill people have the right to medical assistance to kill themselves if they choose to do so. But right-to-die advocates say that right should also be extended to those who want to end their lives before the onset of illness and incapacitation that comes with age.

A petition asking the Dutch parliament to debate whether all people over 70 have a right to suicide gathered more than 117,000 signatures. The petition's sponsors hope to put it on the parliamentary agenda after elections in June.

Assisted suicide is technically against the law in the Netherlands, but there are exceptions. Doctors who assist with suicides cannot be punished if they can prove they adhered to strict medical and ethical guidelines, and if the patient was suffering from an "unbearable and hopeless" illness and had explicitly and repeatedly requested the doctor's assistance in dying.

But the Dutch organization De Einder, or Horizon, and other right-to-die advocacy groups say that older individuals should be able to determine when they want to end their own lives, even if they are not suffering from serious illness. Instead, they should have the option of committing suicide at a point where they consider their lives "complete."


[There are other related stories in the Links section below.]
[There are stories in the Overflow section below.]

Links:

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 and future advisories on the web (see bottom.)

  • http://tinyurl.com/33vtu9f

  • http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5627515,00.html

    Also see:

  • Dutch citizens group argues "right to die" for over 70s [EuthaNEWSia, Feb. 9, 2010]
    http://www.euthanewsia.ca/archive/2010/02/enid201002093826.4.html

    A citizens action group wants to legalize assisted suicide for all people over 70, who have an "explicit, logical and consistent" desire to end their life. They say the task should be carried out by a new kind of specially trained and certified professional. The group, "Out of Free Will", will start collecting signatures to lobby for a change in legislation. A number of prominent Dutch citizens have come out in support of the initiative, including former ministers and artists, legal scholars and physicians.

  • Fewer assisted suicides in the Netherlands by oral route [World right-to-die news list]
    http://lists.opn.org/pipermail/right-to-die_lists.opn.org/2010-May/003887.html
    Suicide assisted by [Dutch] general practitioners often comes to pass by drinking a deadly cocktail. Ten years ago it happened in 25% of the cases. This percentage has dropped last year to 15. Researcher Annemieke Horikx of the KNMP, the pharmacist association, mentioned this in Medisch Contact, the periodical for general practitioners.

    A general practitioner explained this decline is being caused by pharmacists, who have to make the cocktail themselves. Often they don't have the basic ingredients in stock, because the keeping date expires, due to the minimal demand. So it is a vicious circle.

  • Dutch euthanasia laws now better reported [World right-to-die news list]
    http://lists.opn.org/pipermail/right-to-die_lists.opn.org/2010-May/003888.html
    Researchers from the Dutch Research institute for Health Care, Nivel, write in the general practitioners periodical The British Journal of General Practice that the number of requests for euthanasia have not increased since the euthanasia law came into existence. The number of reports did increase, but not the requests to general practitioners.

    ‘It means that euthanasia does not happen more often, but that it is reported more frequently’ says epidemiologist Ge Donker on the Nivel-website `and this is good for the quality: better means are being use in the correct dose.'

Source:

Siek, Stephanie. "Dutch groups want to expand assisted suicide rights". Deutsche Welle. 28.05.2010. <www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5627515,00.html>. Deutsche Welle, D-53110 Bonn, Germany.

Tags:

Tags (or keywords) briefly indicate some major topics of the report.

  • assisted suicide

  • euthanasia

  • NVVE, Right to Die - Netherlands

  • Of Free Will

  • Netherlands

Overflow:

Stories that EuthaNEWSia did not get to:

  • Wisconsin: Assisted suicide case asks: When is help criminal? [Chicago Tribune]
    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-ap-wi-akillerssuicide,0,2498623.story
    A Wisconsin inmate is expected to stand trial next month on allegations that he helped his cellmate, a killer, commit suicide. Joshua Walters could face up to 10 years in prison if convicted of assisting in the January 2009 suicide of Adam Peterson. Prosecutors say Walters encouraged Peterson to take his life and even helped tie the noose from a bed sheet in their cell at the Dodge Correctional Institute in Waupun.

  • Montana: Death With Dignity Declared A Choice [KFBB.com]
    http://www.kfbb.com/news/local/94982154.html
    A news video interview on Montana's access to assisted suicide.

  • Barbara Coombs Lee: The Crime of Assisting a Suicide [Huffington Post]
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/barbara-coombs-lee/the-crime-of-assisting-a_b_590847.html
    Barbara Coombs Lee writes an opinion piece extolling the virtues of assisting the suicide of elderly patients in the final stages of terminal illness, and decrying the vice of all other types of assisted suicide. Coombs Lee conflates the acts of persuading a person to commit suicide and the act of assisting a person to commit suicide.

  • Four Moral Issues Sharply Divide Americans [gallup.com]
    http://www.gallup.com/poll/137357/Four-Moral-Issues-Sharply-Divide-Americans.aspx?utm_source=tagrss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=syndication&utm_term=Politics
    The findings are from Gallup's annual Values and Beliefs survey, conducted May 3-6, 2010. While doctor-assisted suicide is the most controversial of the issues tested, with the public tied at 46% over its moral acceptability, Americans are fairly unified in their opposition to another life-ending choice — suicide —  with 77% calling this morally wrong.

  • Dutch euthanasia laws now better reported [World right-to-die news list]
    http://lists.opn.org/pipermail/right-to-die_lists.opn.org/2010-May/003888.html
    Researchers from the Dutch Research institute for Health Care, Nivel, write in the general practitioners periodical The British Journal of General Practice that the number of requests for euthanasia have not increased since the euthanasia law came into existence. The number of reports did increase, but not the requests to general practitioners.

    ‘It means that euthanasia does not happen more often, but that it is reported more frequently’ says epidemiologist Ge Donker on the Nivel-website `and this is good for the quality: better means are being use in the correct dose.'

  • assisted suicide UK - Michael Bateman [World right-to-die news list]
    http://lists.opn.org/pipermail/right-to-die_lists.opn.org/2010-May/003889.html
    Chris Docker of EXIT, Scotland, concludes an overview of the Bateman case:

    Change is most likely if their is a near consensus of public opinion. The 'exceptions to the rule' method seems to be the way things are going. Unfortunately, parliamentarians suggesting new assisted suicide laws tend to put forward prescriptive measures that alienate and polarise the populace. This can mean sympathetic organisations are faced with the difficult dilemma of whether to support a badly crafted law that 'means well.'

  • Britain: Laws on mercy killing questioned [BBC News]
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/essex/8701835.stm
    The eldest son of a woman convicted of murdering her brain-damaged child has called for changes in the law governing "mercy killing". Frances Inglis, 57, injected a lethal shot of heroin into her 22-year-old son Thomas in November 2008 after an earlier attempt had failed.

    In an interview on BBC 5Live, Alex Inglis said his mother had acted in Thomas' "best interest". He explained that the family and Thomas' doctors were discussing the possibility of applying to the courts to have food and water withdrawn from him to end his life but that he believed the process was "cruel". He said his mother had acted to spare Thomas from being "dehydrated to death".


    Later, Inglis said: He said that he would have considered ending Thomas' life himself if his mother had not done so and suggested that the law was failing to address the issue of mercy killing.

  • Connecticut letter: Assisted suicide is my choice [New Haven Register]
    http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2010/05/22/opinion/doc4bf5f6fb40342864540973.txt
    An extract from Carol Hummel's letter: Unless you've cared for a loved one with Alzheimer's disease, you could never understand the torment you both suffer. I cared for my beloved mother in my home, and it was the hardest thing I've ever done in my lifetime. I have told my husband of 48 years I would not want my son to be responsible for my care if I should be diagnosed with Alzheimer's. I would hope my husband would have the courage to end my suffering.

    I am strongly in favor of assisted suicide laws. I've worked in the nursing field for 25 years, and witnessed abuse to patients who could not speak or complain.

    For me, assisted suicide is my choice. If I could have ended my mother's suffering, I would have.

  • Connecticut: Editorial: North Haven deaths are the exception [New Haven Register]
    http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2010/05/28/opinion/doc4c00046af2529904545032.txt
    The deaths of the Vanacores are being cited as an example of why the state's law barring assisted suicide should be changed. It is, however, more an example of what advocates for the disabled fear - that such a law would be used to end their lives.

    The doctors are asking the courts to make a decision that should be taken by the legislature. But, the legislature has refused to act on amendments to the 1969 law. Lawmakers inclined to change the law hope the courts will rule first.

    A favorable ruling would mean a fundamental change in the doctor-patient relationship. Counseling or providing the means to commit suicide is a far step beyond treating or curing a patient.

  • Assisted Suicide Shouldn't Be Option [Hartford Courant]
    http://www.courant.com/news/opinion/editorials/hc-digbrflets0522.artmay22,0,3831317.story
    Nancy Ann Foley, a person with a disability, writes opposing the legalization of assisted suicide: Furthermore, it seems that advocates for assisted suicide place physicians on a pedestal as compassionate caregivers who can be entrusted with the task of helping someone die. In my experience, too many physicians are callous and cause the disabled to suffer unnecessarily.

    And Richard A. Castagno is living on his own and driving, after recovering from a very serious stroke. Castagno writes: I think Kathryn Tucker, legal director for the national end-of-life care advocacy group Compassion & Choices, would say that my situation is not what she's talking about. However, the first few days after my stroke, I continued going downhill. The prognosis was hopeless at best. If doctors had been given the authority to withhold treatment because my situations looked so bleak, would compassion have dictated, in my case, that they pull the plug?

ID:

The EuthaNEWSia ID for this advisory is: enid201005288174.
Mailed: Friday, May 28, 2010 14:33:29 -0600
at Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.

Etcetera:

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

To subscribe send a message to:

euthanewsia-subscribe@euthanewsia.ca
You may leave the Subject blank and the message empty: the server only reads the From address on the message.

To unsubscribe send a message to:

euthanewsia-unsubscribe@euthanewsia.ca
You may leave the Subject blank and the message empty: the server only reads the From address on the message.

-------------------------------------------------------------

On the Web:

Problems? Send an email to: editor@euthanewsia.ca