2007-09-27 From: Salt Lake Tribune, UT, US
U. study shows no abuse of legal doctor-assisted
suicide
http://www.sltrib.com/portlet/article/html/fragments/print_article.jsp?articleId=7006621&siteId=297
By Kirsten Stewart
The Salt Lake
Tribune
Article Last Updated:09/26/2007 05:09:29 PM
MDT
Posted: 5:09 PM- Legalizing doctor-assisted suicide in Oregon and the
Netherlands did not, as some critics predicted, result in disproportionate
deaths among the elderly, poor, uninsured, disabled or mentally ill, a study led
by the University of Utah shows.
Of 10 "vulnerable" groups examined in
the study - which also included women, ethnic minorities, children and people
with non-terminal, chronic illnesses - only AIDS patients chose euthanasia at
elevated rates.
The study will be published in the October 2007 issue of
the Journal of Medical Ethics.
It does not speak to the morality of a
practice alternately labeled, "patient directed dying" or "mercy killing."
Instead, the study is "resolutely, empirically neutral," said lead author and U.
bioethicist Margaret Battin.
But it rebuts the popular, and powerful,
"slippery slope" argument against euthanasia: the idea that making it legal for
doctors to help patients die is incompatible with the role of healer, and could
lead to widespread abuse.
Researchers asked: Would vulnerable
populations, "be pressured, manipulated or forced to request or accept
physician-assisted dying by overburdened family members, callous physicians, or
institutions or insurers concern about their own profits?"
The answer
was, no.
To the contrary, the privileged - those with an advanced
education and greater financial security - appear more likely to end their lives
this way, researchers found.
The study is the first to look at data from
Oregon and the Netherlands.
Dutch law does not require that a patient be
terminally ill, but that he or she be facing "unbearable, hopeless suffering."
Oregon's law is more restrictive. It allows doctors to prescribe lethal
medications to patients who have been diagnosed by two physicians as having a
terminal illness and less than six months to live.
The data also cover
different time periods, but overlap in striking ways, said Battin.
The
median age of those who elect help in dying is 70, seven years below the average
life expectancy in both countries. Eighty percent are cancer patients, followed
by people diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's disease.
The findings are grouped
according to the strength of the data. The evidence was strongest against there
being a higher risk for the elderly, women and uninsured.
But the
evidence that a greater risk did exist for AIDS patients is equally strong. In
Oregon, between 1998 and 2006, only six AIDS patients ended their lives with the
help of a doctor.
But that's 30 times the rate of a comparable group of
people who died with chronic respiratory disorders, the study says.
That
comes as a surprise to Stan Penfold, director of the Utah AIDS Foundation.
Before 1997, AIDS was considered "a death sentence," but treatment has
improved and is now widely available, said Penfold. "People can survive pretty
well, even those who get on meds late in the progression of their disease," he
said.
Battin, a U. philosophy professor and adjunct professor of
internal medicine, is a respected scholar, specializing in suicide, death and
dying. Most of her research is neutral.
At least two of the dozens of
articles and books she has written, however, argue in favor of the legalization
of assisted death. Also, Battin is on the advisory board of the Death with
Dignity National Center, a non-profit group that defends Oregon's euthanasia
law.
Oregon is the only state in the U.S. where the practice is legal.
Battin would not discuss her views, saying, "There are times when
articulation of one's own view is appropriate and times when it's not."
She noted that other researchers who collaborated on the project have opposing
opinions. On the team are: public health physician Agnes van der Heide of
Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam; psychiatrist Linda Ganzini at Oregon Health
& Science University in Portland; and physician Gerrit van der Wal and
health scientist Bregje Onwuteaka-Philipsen of the VU University Medical Center
in Amsterdam.
The study isn't the first to refute the "slippery slope"
argument, a concern cited by the American Medical Association, American College
of Physicians and U.S. Supreme Court.
"It keeps popping up, even in the
face of nine years of data showing it doesn't happen, because it's a scare
tactic," said Death with Dignity director Peg Sandeen. "It's scary to think the
wrong people will die for the wrong reasons."
Stephen Drake, an analyst
at Not Dead Yet, a disabled rights group opposed to euthanasia, claims the study
used "soft" data self-reported by doctors.
Proponents of assisted death,
argue the methodology was peer reviewed.
"It's the most pre-eminent
examination of the data with the slippery slope question in mind," said Kathryn
Tucker, legal affairs director at Compassion & Choices.