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The anti-euthanasia site, LifeSiteNews,
reports:
The French Senate is preparing to
debate the legalization of assisted suicide for patients suffering from an
"advanced" stage of a serious illness, according to La Croix, a national
Catholic newspaper.
The language of the two bills under consideration, which were respectively
proposed by a communist and a socialist legislator, would legalize
euthanasia under vague terms that would permit patients to be euthanized
because of "psychological" suffering, or even because they are indignant
over their circumstances.
One bill, proposed by communist Jean-Pierre Godefroy, states that "any
mature person, in the advanced or terminal phase of a accidental or
pathological affliction that is grave or incurable, causing physical or
psychological suffering that cannot be relieved and that she judges to be
unendurable, can request to receive (…) medical assistance to die."
The second, proposed by socialist Alain Fouche, allows that "anyone
capable, in an advanced or terminal phase of an illness that is recognized
s grave and incurable or placed in a state of dependence that she regards
as incompatible with her dignity, can ask to receive (…) medical
assistance to die."
The debate represents the first time that the Senate has agreed to
consider such measures. France has been subject to an intense
pro-euthanasia campaign since 2008, when several cases of medical patients
requesting assisted suicide were publicized by the French media.
Later in the report:
The debate is scheduled to be held on January 25.
[There are other related stories in the Links section below.]
[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 and future advisories on the web (see bottom.)
http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/france-prepares-to-debate-legalization-of-assisted-suicide/
Also see:
France: Senate Discusses pro-euthanasia bills January 25, 2011
[le blog de Jacqueline Jencquel]
http://tinyurl.com/4g7yyr8
This link leads to an English-language version (Google
Translate English, that is) of Jacqueline
Jencquel's January 4th
French-language
posting on this topic.
Hoffman, Matthew Cullinan. "France prepares to debate legalization of assisted suicide". LifeSiteNews.com. Wed Jan 12, 2011 20:02 EST. <www.lifesitenews.com/news/france-prepares-to-debate-legalization-of-assisted-suicide/>. LifeSiteNews.com, 104 Bond St, Third Floor, Toronto ON M5B 1X9 Canada.
Tags (or keywords) briefly indicate some major topics of the report.
assisted suicide
legislation
France
Stories that EuthaNEWSia did not get to:
Barcelona man commits "assisted suicide" in Switzerland
[TheReader.es]
http://thereader.es/en/spain-news-stories/5680-Barcelona-man-commits-assisted-suicide-in-Switzerland.html
An 80-year-old Barcelona man with severe respiratory problems has perished
in Switzerland in an "assisted suicide" overseen by the Dignitas
association and with the help of his two daughters.
Nuria, one of the daughters, told journalists from "El Periodico de
Catalunya" today that her Her dad had perished on October 18th in a house
in a little village to and from Basel and Zurich.
The man's daughter, who is being given legal advice by the association
"Derecho a Morir Dignamente" (the correct to Die with Dignity), has
decided to make her father's case public in order to put pressure on the
police sources here in Spain to legalise assisted suicide and dignified
deaths.
Jordi, the octogenarian in impeach, read a letter to his two daughters in
April last year, explaining that he felt he had "no life left" and asked
for their help in an assisted suicide.
USA: Anti-Choice at the End of Life
[The Nation]
http://www.thenation.com/article/157751/anti-choice-end-life
Ann Neumann writes about the context in which
the American national government has failed to
provide Medicare coverage for advance care
planning counseling. Extracts:
Opponents of the healthcare bill got the White House running scared by
spreading the "death panel" meme from conservative legal groups to Fox
to right-wing blogs and back again, both after the Affordable Care Act
passed and after Christmas. But they weren't building a messaging
chain from scratch. Instead, they worked the same network that has
been mobilized since the 1970s to fight legal abortion. For the past
decade, those same religious organizations have begun working to limit
treatment choices for those facing the end of their lives, a
development that increasingly impedes meaningful healthcare, and
resigns countless elders-including millions of aging Baby Boomers-to
"healthcare" that does little for, or even damage to, their quality of
life.
And:
The Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation is far from the only anti-choice
group now also fighting patients` choice at the end of life. The
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) has taken up opposition to
health care reform and advance care planning with abandon; their
Robert Powell Center for Medical Ethics, named for the disabled early
vice president of NRLC, "serves as NRLC's arm in fighting to protect
the vulnerable born from both direct killing and denial of lifesaving
medical treatment, food and fluids." They've maintained a blog about
end of life issues and healthcare reform since June of 2009. These
groups have long held that the legalization of abortion has cheapened
the value of life; in their eyes Death with Dignity does the same, and
legitimizes their fear that the United States is on a "slippery slope"
toward state-sanctioned killing of "innocent life" among us.
A collective American reticence to frankly discuss death enables
organizations like the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network and NRLC to
misinform the public about existing government programs like hospice,
Medicare, and other legal tools for the elderly, like advanced
directives and medical proxies, which can provide more control over
how they age and die. Combined with a paternalistic medical
profession that's only recently begun training new doctors on how to
talk to patients about how to plan their end of life care and a
Republican party dependent on the support of anti-choice groups,
"pro-life" groups have been able to fundamentally shape state and
federal legislation.
USA: Hello Patients Rights Council
[Blog of Wesley J. Smith]
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/2011/01/08/hello-patients-rights-council/
The International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide has
changed its name to the Patients Rights Council to better reflect its
mission. From the Council's statement:
Those familiar with the work of the International Task Force know that
we're committed to providing documented research and information on
euthanasia and doctor-prescribed suicide, practices that abandon
patients when they are most vulnerable. But the actual scope of our work
is even broader than that. It encompasses all end-of-life issues -
from the withholding of food and fluids from vulnerable patients to the
denial of wanted, life-saving treatment deemed futile by health care
providers; from the creation and dissemination of our state-specific
durable power of attorney for health care (the Protective Medical
Decisions Document to publication of the book Power over Pain: How to
Get the Pain Control You Need.
What all of this has in common is our strong commitment to protecting
patients' rights. That's why, starting in January 2011, the name,
International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide, changed to
the Patients Rights Council.
Connecticut: Son Arraigned in Death of Father with Alzheimer's
[West Hartford Patch]
http://westhartford.patch.com/articles/son-arraigned-in-death-of-father-with-alzheimers
This report begins:
A Massachusetts man accused of manslaughter in connection with the death
of his father, a prominent retired West Hartford lawyer, was arraigned
Thursday in Hartford Superior Court.
The state's case against Bruce F. Brodigan, 56, of 63 Linden Ave.,
Somerville, was continued until Jan. 27, when a plea hearing is scheduled.
Brodigan, who is free on a $250,000 bond, is charged with second-degree
manslaughter, a Class C felony, tampering with evidence, making false
statements to police and interfering with police.
His father, George D. Brodigan, who had
Alzheimer's disease, died Sept. 14
in his bed at 50 Timberwood Road, West Hartford police said. He was 82.
The cause of Brodigan"s death was an overdose of alcohol and
amitriptyline, police said. The state Medical Examiner"s office was
unable to determine the manner of death, West Hartford police Det. Dawn
Lascari said in a 12-page affidavit that resulted in an arrest warrant.
And:
A toxicology study indicated Brodigan"s blood-alcohol level was .13, far
exceeding the legal definition of impairment. The antidepressant
medication amitriptyline was prescribed to Bruce Brodigan, Det. Lascari
said in the arrest affidavit. Evidence collected at the house included a
half-bottle of rum, do-not-resuscitate orders, financial documents and a
copy of "Final Exit," a how-to guide for suicide.
According to the police report, Brodigan told investigators that his
father was diagnosed with Alzheimer"s "four to five years ago." He
said his father "confided in him that he had planned to take his own
life before he became completely incapacitated."
Britain: Eminent surgeon joins right-to-die campaign
[The Independent]
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/eminent-surgeon-joins-righttodie-campaign-2180290.html
The heart transplant pioneer Sir Terence English has joined the
right-to-die campaign. As one of Britain's most eminent surgeons, and a
former president of the Royal College of Surgeons, Sir Terence's
involvement will give added impetus to demands for doctors to be allowed
to assist terminally ill patients to take their own lives.
Sir Terence, who performed Britain's first successful heart transplant at
Papworth Hospital, Cambridgeshire, in 1979, said he would be personally
prepared to assist a patient to take their own life provided that he knew
the patient was terminally ill, of sound mind and had not been "got at" by
friends or relatives.
The former master of St Catherine's College,
Cambridge, has joined the
Healthcare Professionals
for Assisted Dying group. "I would want there to
be safeguards," he said yesterday. "I understand
there are many doctors who, as with abortion,
would not wish to have anything to do with
assisted dying. [But] I think there are enough
doctors who feel as I do."
Book: Review of "What You Wish For"
[Amazon.com]
http://tinyurl.com/4lxahgs
From a recent review by Michael Cycle of Bill
Pieper's novel "What You Wish For":
Bill Pieper's new novel offers keen insight into a
mournful topic - euthanasia. The story is gripping and
a good read while challenging the reader to sift
through his/her ideas about what one would do given a
similar set of circumstances. It was even more poignant
for me as I attend to a parent in hospice. Personal
risk, legal and ethical consequences, family and small
town drama all come together in a novel I highly
recommend. As a unique bonus, enjoy the wind in your
hair tour through the Napa Valley and the coast just
north of San Francisco.
Canada: Parliamentary Committee on Palliative and Compassionate Care receives input in Montreal
[Euthanasia Prevention Coalition]
http://alexschadenberg.blogspot.com/2011/01/parliamentary-committee-on-palliative.html
Alex Schadenberg of the Euthanasia Prevention
Coalition reports on the latest activities of the
ad hoc Parliamentary Committee on Palliative and
Compassionate Care, and looks forward to its
report.
Scotland: Call for less aggressive treatment for elderly
[HeraldScotland]
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/health/call-for-less-aggressive-treatment-for-elderly-1.1078823
A leading public health expert has called for the NHS to give elderly
people less treatment as they approach the end of their lives.
Professor Phil Hanlon, a former adviser to the Scottish Executive,
believes the health service is in danger of collapse unless drastic action
is taken to halt its soaring costs.
In a controversial new book, he argues the elderly should be prescribed
far fewer drugs and given fewer tests and procedures as they reach serious
physical decline.
This, he says, would not only save money but would also offer health
benefits - for example, reducing the risk of frail pensioners catching
hospital superbugs.
Mr Hanlon, who continues to serve on ministerial working groups, also
suggests hospitals should stop throwing away surgical instruments because
of the small risk they could spread disease such as variant CJD, the human
form of mad-cow disease.
He told The Herald: "The risk of a collapse of the health service because
it is not sustainable is a lot bigger than the risk of prion disease."
Called the Future Public Health, Mr Hanlon's forthcoming book is the
result of a sabbatical he took last summer. Although he acknowledges his
recommendations come at a time when public-sector finance is being
squeezed, he claims his aim is not to save the Government money.
Wisconsin: Quadriplegic fighting for right to die moving to care facility
[JSOnline]
http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/113145759.html
Dan Crews,
the
quadriplegic fighting to have his ventilator
removed, is planning to move to a long-term care
facility sometime this week, he said. He must
sell his Antioch, Ill., home in order to pay a
mountain of medical bills from the last several
months.
"I feel horrible about it, but it doesn't look like there are many
options," Crews said. Even if he somehow managed to pay off his bills, he
estimates that he would need $10 million to live out his life.
Crews, a quadriplegic since he was in a car accident at age 3, uses an
artificial respirator to breathe. He began a battle to die over a year and
a half ago with Froedtert Hospital in Wauwatosa. Crews wanted the hospital
to remove his ventilator because he deemed his quality of life poor and
did not anticipate it ever improving. Physicians at the hospital worried
that depression and money concerns were clouding his judgment. He
initiated a hunger strike last summer, which ultimately failed.
After the Journal Sentinel published Crews' story, he was inundated with
supportive letters and phone calls. Some people even offered to help him
with his expenses.
Wisconsin: State should ration health care, doctor association proposes
[madison.com]
http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/health_med_fit/article_b87932d4-1b51-11e0-82a8-001cc4c03286.html
As the state prepares to plug a $1.2 billion Medicaid hole, it should look
beyond cutting enrollment, payments and entire benefit programs to another
option: rationing care, as Oregon does.
That's what the Wisconsin Medical Society, the state's doctor association,
is proposing. Oregon ranks services and refuses to cover a fourth of them
because of budget constraints.
In Oregon, Medicaid covers ear tube surgery for chronic ear infections,
for example, but not medications for pink eye. Treatments for vaginal
cysts barely made the cut this year, while drugs for a skin rash fell just
below.
The goal is to save money without removing people from Medicaid, the
state-federal health plan for the poor. Wisconsin's $6 billion Medicaid
program, which expanded significantly under Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle, now
covers 1.2 million people, or one in five residents.
The Medicaid budget gap for 2011-2013 is estimated to be $1.2 billion,
said Seth Boffeli, spokesman for the Wisconsin Department of Health
Services. It's inevitable the state will have to make cuts, said Dr. Tim
Bartholow, a senior vice president of the medical society.
"We want as many people as possible to have access to some care, rather
than let some have terrific access and other people have none," Bartholow
said.
The proposal, approved by the medical society board after the November
election of Republican Gov. Scott Walker, will be offered to the Walker
administration as an alternative to payment cuts for doctors, Bartholow
said.
Taiwan approves law to allow relatives to end life support
[Monsters and Critics.com]
http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/health/news/article_1610562.php/Taiwan-approves-law-to-allow-relatives-to-end-life-support
Taipei - Taiwan's parliament Monday approved a revised bill to allow close
relatives to request the withdrawal of life support for patients who are
both terminally ill and non-cognitive.
Each request would then be assessed to check that the patient had no
chance of recovery or regaining consciousness.
The legislation revises the Hospice and Palliative Care Act, which
previously required the patient to have given prior approval for life
support to be turned off in case of terminal illness.
The bill was passed two weeks after an elderly Taiwan man euthanized his
ailing wife. It was expected to address concerns that Taiwan law prevents
the terminally ill from dying with dignity.
Australia: Talk of euthanasia just distress, inquest hears
[Sydney Morning Herald]
http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/talk-of-euthanasia-just-distress-inquest-hears-20110114-19r8w.html
Talk of euthanasia and murder-suicide by a couple whose daughter showed
signs of disability was only ''an extreme reaction'' to distressing news,
not evidence they wanted to harm the girl, their lawyer told an inquest
yesterday.
Two-year-old Maia Comas drowned in a blow-up pool at her family's Curl
Curl home on December 3, 2007. Three months earlier she was tentatively
diagnosed with Rett syndrome, a severe developmental disorder that leaves
patients requiring full-time care.
The Coroners Court in Glebe has heard that Maia's parents, Pablo Comas and
Samantha Razniak, had asked about legal euthanasia. Ms Razniak threatened
to jump off a cliff with Maia and told a Department of Community Services
worker she would be ''better off asleep forever''.
A deputy state coroner, Scott Mitchell, is examining whether or not her
death was accidental.
Australia: Parents raised possibility of euthanasia for disabled child, inquest told
[The Sydney Morning Herald]
http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/parents-raised-possibility-of-euthanasia-for-disabled-child-inquest-told-20110110-19l7s.html
Like any parents in their situation, they were devastated to learn their
child would grow up with a disability.
But unlike most parents, this couple raised the possibility of euthanasia.
An inquest heard yesterday that after their two-year-old girl was
tentatively diagnosed with Rett syndrome, an incurable developmental
disorder, the despairing parents asked a paediatrician whether there was
legal or medical support for euthanasia. Told that it was not a legal
option, the mother then spoke of jumping off a cliff with the girl.
The father later said that the toddler was ''dragging us down'' and asked:
''Why do they keep children with these disabilities alive? It doesn't seem
fair on the child.''
Less than three months later, in December 2007, the girl drowned in an
inflatable pool at her family's Curl Curl home.
Whether her death was accidental, or was caused by a deliberate act, is
the focus of an inquest at the Coroner's Court in Glebe. For legal
reasons, the girl cannot be named.
Rett syndrome almost exclusively affects girls, who develop normally
before regressing, losing their language skills and suffering problems
with movement and intellectual disability. Most require full-time care.
The EuthaNEWSia ID for this advisory is: enid201101144335.
Mailed: Friday, January 14, 2011 14:34:28 -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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