The following article was written by Ruth Enns and published on April 22, 2013 by CBC News Manitoba concerning the case of Susan Griffiths. Ruth Enns is the author of A voice unheard: The Latimer case and people with disabilities. This is her essay opposing the legalization of assisted suicide in Canada.
By Ruth Enns - CBC News Manitoba - April 22, 2013.
In
theory, legal assisted suicide sounds compassionate and safe, promising
autonomy. How could one person’s decision about their own body possibly harm
someone else?
In reality, assisted suicide doesn’t live up to its billing. For example, we know suicides can trigger copycat suicides, and we do everything possible to prevent such tragedies. But I hear nothing about discouraging copycat assisted suicides. Why the double standard?
Quality of life and
intrinsic versus extrinsic evaluations
A
clue to the double standard lies in the commonly used phrase “quality of life”
(QoL). In medical contexts, QoL seems to be code for disability, pain and
proximity to death with frequent conflation of these three.
People with disabilities
regularly encounter misperceptions of their “suffering” and pain. They find
others rate their lives and QoL lower than they do themselves.
Assisted suicide proponents
assume people would intrinsically assess their own QoL.
However, apparently most people
can’t readily distinguish between intrinsic and extrinsic evaluations.
Robert Latimer killing his
disabled daughter was often portrayed as synonymous with Sue Rodriguez’s fight
for a physician assisted suicide. The Latimer case fit the definition of
first-degree murder while Rodriguez was an adult apparently making her own
decisions about her own life.
If in practice we can’t tell the
difference between assisted suicide, euthanasia and murder when the victim is
disabled, how can we say legalized assisted suicide would be no threat to
marginalized people?
Choice
Whenever this question arises,
the automatic assumption of assisted suicide proponents is opponents are
against choice.
I want my wishes to be honoured
as much as anyone else. However, I also value equal participation in community.
We all need autonomy but not at the expense of belonging.
Also, while suicide involves only
the person choosing to die, assisted suicide involves at least one other person
and, therefore, it cannot be just an individual choice.
Power imbalance
Where does choice lie when there
is an imbalance of power? Doctors’ superior medical knowledge and positions
give the, not only more power than their patients but also power over their
patients.
Those of us without medical
knowledge can never know whether information is being withheld or given
selectively. We rely on trust. If our doctors have the authority to end our
lives, what happens to that trust?
How can we make informed
decisions without adequate information? How can we tell when we are being coerced
into agreeing with our doctors? Who is really making medical decisions about
us?
In my book on the Latimer case, I
described the late Mike Rosner’s experience with his doctors in 1992.
Instead of treatment for his
treatable pneumonia he was offered “death with dignity.” Only with the help of
friends was he able to get the treatment he needed and continue with his
productive life.
When death for those of us with
disabilities is termed “dignified” it implies that our lives are not dignified.
When those holding our lives in their hands devalue us and deny us treatment
for treatable conditions, where is our choice?
Cultural bias against life with disability
Double standards and imposed or
coerced premature deaths are rooted in a strong cultural bias against life with
disability.
We recognize bullied teenagers
who choose to end their lives have been pushed to that extreme. We do not
seemingly recognize people with disabilities are also bullied and often
socially isolated. Martin Norden (Cinema of Isolation) said in film, disabled
characters are either cured or killed, literally or figuratively. As with the
Latimer case, people with disabilities are most notable by their exclusion from
the scripts.
The same is true in literature.
The stereotypes are invariably worthy or unworthy sorts. The worthy, like Tiny
Tim, are rewarded with a cure while the unworthy ones, such as Captain Hook,
Captain Ahab or Long John Silver are “killed.”
Such obvious prejudice in our
culture constitutes cultural bullying and emotional abuse leaving many people
with disabilities feeling emotionally abandoned, worthless or traumatized. How
can we say choosing assisted suicide in the face of such a strong negative bias
is any more rational than the "choice" of the bullied teenager? In
this cultural script of life, legalizing “death with dignity” would strongly
imply that if we become burdensome, we become undignified and unworthy. If we
want to be worthy, we should bow out.
Where, then, is the choice for
people with disabilities, for anyone from a marginalized group?
Safeguards
With pervasive inability to
differentiate between intrinsic and extrinsic evaluations, how can safeguards
protect anyone?
Alex Schadenberg of the
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition has shown that in Belgium the safeguards are routinely ignored, and of those
doctors who ignored them, most didn’t even realize they had strayed from
assisted suicide to euthanasia and even murder.
Where was the choice for these
doctors’ patients?
Polls and manufacturing consent
Polls on assisted death abound,
usually revealing huge support. But do these polls really measure what they
claim to be measuring?
Since most respondents in such
polls probably have little or no firsthand experience with disability or death
and dying, how can they predict what they will want in circumstances they
haven’t experienced?
These polls create the impression
of public support for assisted death when in reality they may be an expression
of the negative cultural bias and fear surrounding life with disability.
Fear of becoming disabled is
rational. It keeps most of us from putting ourselves in harm’s way. However,
living with disability is also rational and dignified.
Those of us living with
disabilities didn’t choose our disabilities. We are simply ordinary human
beings using ordinary resilience to make lemonade from the lemons life hands
us.
These polls don’t reflect our
experiences or choices.
What would legalized assisted
suicide do to assistants?
How do medical people go from
helping people to live to providing the means to die? Do such assistants become
desensitized, perhaps even to the point of ignoring other possibilities for the
people they are "helping?" Do they have to shift their perceptions of
themselves and their roles?
Certainly the ones who find such
assistance easy are the scariest. According to Alex Schadenberg’s book on
euthanasia in Belgium , most of those doctors who ignore guidelines and kill
people without consent do not even classify their actions as euthanasia. We
human beings are very good at rationalizing our actions.
Conclusion
I sympathize with Susan
Griffiths’ fear of her prognosis. My opposition to her decision doesn’t mean I
would want to see people like her forced into a dreary, meaningless existence.
We do have the right to refuse medical treatment.
Nor is my opposition an attempt
to evade death. I am simply begging her and others contemplating similar
decisions to please consider the effects of their actions on others.
We are not islands. Our decisions
and actions always affect others. I don’t want to see more Tracy Latimers, and
I don’t want anyone to feel pressured into dying “with dignity.”
Link: To learn more about the current practice and abuses of the Belgian and Netherlands euthanasia laws, by ordering the book, by Alex Schadenberg ($20 includes shipping): Exposing Vulnerable People to Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide. Exposing Vulnerable People will prepare you to oppose the legalization of euthanasia and assisted suicide.
Link: To learn more about the current practice and abuses of the Belgian and Netherlands euthanasia laws, by ordering the book, by Alex Schadenberg ($20 includes shipping): Exposing Vulnerable People to Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide. Exposing Vulnerable People will prepare you to oppose the legalization of euthanasia and assisted suicide.
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