Dr Gordon Macdonald, the CEO of the Care Not Killing Alliance comments on Scotland's "assisted dying" bill.
We at Care Not Killing have a lot of concerns about this.
We have seen, with the COVID
pandemic how elderly people and disabled people have suffered more than
others. How they haven't received the same care as other people have
received in many cases, how there has been a disproportionate number of
disabled people who have died as a result of COVID, how do not
resuscitate orders were placed on people without their consent or their
knowledge. The government have been very clear that the policy on do not
resuscitate orders wasn't that it should be applied in a blanket way
and it is almost certainly a breach of human rights and yet it happened.
So how can we trust the safeguards which are being talked about for this bill that the government will actually implement them?
And more over, in other jurisdictions we have seen how the safeguards have eroded.
In
the Netherlands, when assisted suicide and euthanasia were introduced,
they were expanded from people who were terminally ill to people who are
chronically ill. From people who were mentally competent to people who
are not mentally competent. To people with psychiatric illnesses, from
adult's to children and there is a debate currently applying it to
children aged 1 to 12 and it already applies to infants who are disabled
with spina bifida and other conditions, up to the age of 12 months.
In
Belgium we see that the laws are not implemented properly and
euthanasia deaths happen outside of the law without consent being
obtained. In many cases they happen to people with a multitude of minor
conditions, even when they don't have any major terminal illness or
major suffering which would qualify under the law.
There are all sorts of abuses happening in the Netherlands and Belgium.
Even
in Oregon we see where the numbers have increased from 16 in 1998 to
245 in 2020 of those who are having an assisted suicide. Its likely that
25% of those people, at least, are clinically depressed and yet only
one or two per year have been referred for psychiatric evaluation. So
there is a huge number of people, probably 60, in 2020, who should have
been referred for a psychiatric evaluation before they were given an
assisted suicide but they weren't.
This is what happens in
places like Oregon. They claim that they have strict safeguards but
those safeguards are not implemented.
In other places, such as
Belgium and Canada we are seeing hospice funding being threatened. In
Canada the government published data recently saying that they had saved
$140 Million on care services as a result of introducing euthanasia.
These
are the dangers, I think, that whilst its introduced on the basis of
autonomy and rights, actually it ultimately gets driven by other
factors, saving money, people who are vulnerable being deemed by other
people that their lives are not worth living.
This is a very dangerous development and we really need to not go down this road in Scotland
More information:
- Scottish politician claims assisted suicide bill doesn't legalize assisted suicide (Link)
- Scotland to debate assisted dying bill (Link).
All Canadians need to post this on their social media pages. I've drawn our MPs attention to it... this is one thing I stressed to him (Kyle Seeback) long ago. This doctor mentions how not just the elderly, but the disabled are being abused because of this.... euthanasia against their will.
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