Executive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
The media is reporting that the Belgian euthanasia data has been released. The data shows that the number of euthanasia deaths continues to increase, euthanasia deaths for conditions related to aging have skyrocketed and three children died by euthanasia.
There is no sign that the problems of euthanasia without request and unreported euthanasia deaths has been reduced.
The basic data. In 2016 there were 2028 reported euthanasia deaths up from 2021 in 2015 and in 2017 there were 2309 reported euthanasia deaths, a 14% increase from the previous year. There were 954 reported Belgian euthanasia deaths in 2010 representing a 242% increase in 7 years.
Since 2010, Belgium has expanded euthanasia to include children, people with mental or behavioral conditions and people who are not dying but have chronic conditions. The data indicates that in 2016/17 there were, reportedly, 3 children who died by euthanasia, 77 people with mental or behavior conditions and 710 people with sight loss or incontinence or conditions related to disability or age.
When releasing the 2015 euthanasia data, Wim Distelmans, the chairman of the Euthanasia Evaluation and Control commission told the media that they cannot say for certain the actual number of euthanasia deaths. Distelmans stated:
"Remember, there could be some euthanasia cases carried out but which are not declared so we cannot say for certain what the number is,"Distelman's comments were based on the research published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) (March 19, 2015) on the euthanasia practice in Belgium that found:
- 4.6% of all deaths in 2013 in the Flanders region were euthanasia.
- .05% of all deaths in 2013 in the Flanders region were assisted suicide.
- 1.7% of all deaths in 2013 in the Flanders region were hastened without explicit request.
By comparing the data from the 2013 NEJM study to the official 2013 Belgian euthanasia commission data it is clear that almost half of the euthanasia deaths in 2013 were not reported to the commission.
In 2007, 1.8% of all deaths were hastened deaths without explicit request while in 2013, 1.7% of all deaths were hastened deaths without explicit request.
Ludo Vanopdenbosch |
The most striking example took place at a meeting in early September, ... when the group discussed the case of a patient with severe dementia, who also had Parkinson's disease. To demonstrate the patient's lack of competence, a video was played showing what Vanopdenbosch characterized as "a deeply demented patient."
The patient, whose identity was not disclosed, was euthanized at the family's request... There was no record of any prior request for euthanasia from the patient.Dr. An Haekens, psychiatric director at the Alexianen Psychiatric Hospital in Tienen said:
"It's not euthanasia because the patient didn't ask, so it's the voluntary taking of a life,"
This appalling case of euthanasia without request is not the first dispute. The AP revealed a rift last year between Dr. Willem Distelmans, co-chair of the euthanasia commission, and Dr. Lieve Thienpont, an advocate of euthanasia for the mentally ill. Distelmans suggested some of Thienpont's patients might have been killed without meeting all the legal requirements. Prompted by the AP's reporting, more than 360 doctors, academics and others have signed a petition calling for tighter controls on euthanasia for psychiatric patients.
Euthanasia is out-of-control in Belgium. Some day the people will wake-up and realize how crazy the euthanasia ideology is and recognize the social and human destruction euthanasia has caused.
I read that 50% of Euthanasia cases are not reported in Belgium. Do these figures include unreported cases or only those that are reported ?
ReplyDelete@ John Hayes - these numbers are official numbers, so only reported cases. You're completely right, we have no idea how many actual euthanasia cases there are. One of the many shortcomings of the law in Belgium is that there are no sanctions for if euthanasia is not reported, or if euthanasia is carried out 'wrongly' - if the deceased was not 'mentally competent', if they didn't in fact suffer from a 'medically hopeless situation', ...
ReplyDeleteAnother problem is that some doctors are starting to use palliative sedation with a euthanasia intention - that is, the intention (according to them, the family and/or the patient) is death, but the means used is palliative sedation: the patient is 'put to sleep'. The reason they do this is because there is NO reporting of deaths due to palliative sedation, so no paper work...
I'm a chaplain at a Catholic resthome in Belgium. Sometimes it feels like we're fighting on the front lines