Monday, August 31, 2009

Death by Appointment

An interesting article by Charles Lewis was published in the National Post on Saturday concerning Bill C-384 and the legalization of euthanasia and assisted suicide in Canada.

I really liked how Professor Margaret Somerville was so candid and exacting in her language. She correctly stated:
"They don't see what it means to society ... and let's be blunt in the language we use: you will have doctors killing people and the law authorizing them to do it."

A lot of people fail to understand what euthanasia and assisted suicide are.

To legalize euthanasia will mean to give the right to someone else, usually a physician to be directly and intentionally cause another persons death.

To legalize assisted suicide will mean to give the right to someone else, usually a physician to be directly and intentionally involved with causing another persons death.

These are not unintentional or accidental deaths, such as the use of analgesics to control pain that will sometimes result in a person prematurely dying, but rather these are direct and intentional deaths.

Somerville also correctly states that:
"It is so important not to have the precedent of killing each other in society,"

Please read this interesting article that I have included, following my comments.

I have to question Charles Lewis comments on Bill C-384. He stated:
"The bill adds "safeguards," such as forcing the patient to request death on two occasions. It also requires the doctor to get a second opinion from another physician with no ties to the patient. The patient must also be deemed to be lucid."

The Safeguards in C-384 are an illusion at best. The issue of two requests doesn't protect a person who has been made to feel that they are a burden on others.

The point about a second opinion is not a safeguard. In Oregon the assisted suicide law is operated by Compassion & Choices - the euthanasia lobby group in their state. In 2008 Compassion & Choices facilitated 53 of 60 assisted suicide deaths. Compassion & Choices refers the people to the physicians.

Finally Lewis says that the person must be deemed to be lucid. The bill says that the person must "appear to be lucid". People who appear to be lucid are not necessarily lucid.

The article:

Death by Appointment

http://www.nationalpost.com/todays-paper/story.html?id=1942307&p=3

Attempt to legalize euthanasia revived

Charles Lewis, National Post
Published: Saturday, August 29, 2009

Dr. Jeff Blackmer knows the thin line that exists between helping someone die in comfort and purposely ending their life through medical euthanasia.

The Ottawa physician, who also runs the Canadian Medical Association's office of ethics, deals mainly with spinal cord injuries, and a number of his patients are quadriplegics who depend on a respirator to stay alive. Some of those have asked to have their ventilators removed and be allowed to die. Dr. Blackmer, though an opponent of euthanasia, will prescribe drugs that allow the patient to pass without suffering.

"So what's the difference between letting someone die and giving them drugs to make it easier, and giving them drugs that will kill them?" he asked. "Some may argue it's splitting hairs, but for a physician it's a critical difference in that in the former case it's the underlying disease that is causing death-- we're letting nature run its course."

"The second situation [of giving lethal drugs] is more active, and it's opposed to what doctors are supposed to stand for."
Such arguments will be aired again this fall when Bill C-384, which would make euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide legal, will come up for second reading, the furthest such a bill has ever gone in Canada. It is the third time in four years that Bloc MP Francine Lalonde has sponsored such a bill.

Ms. Lalonde, who has battled cancer for the past two years, said she was only diagnosed after she introduced the bill in 2005. She said before her diagnosis, pain was a theoretical issue. But after what she experienced while she was ill, "pain was no longer theoretical" and so seeing a bill like this passed meant even more.

She is not overly optimistic that will happen. It is a question, she said, of whether parliamentarians have "the guts or courage" to reflect what appears to be the popular will.

Ms. Lalonde believes that such a law would be "reasonable," not a slippery slope to irresponsible killing of the weak and defenceless, and would be a mark of a compassionate society that is willing to help end irreversible pain and suffering.

"Someone's religious or moral beliefs should not become my law," Ms. Lalonde said.

Under C-384, two categories of people would be allowed medical assistance in hastening their own deaths: those with a terminal illness and those who, "after trying or expressly refusing the appropriate treatments available, [continue] to experience severe physical or mental pain without any prospect of relief ..."

The bill adds "safeguards," such as forcing the patient to request death on two occasions. It also requires the doctor to get a second opinion from another physician with no ties to the patient. The patient must also be deemed to be lucid.

Opponents of such legislation are watching the bill with concern. With each attempt to legalize assisted suicide, they say, Canadians are getting more desensitized to the idea. Margaret Somerville, founding director of the McGill Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law, said that if C-384 should pass, it would push society over a dangerous line and lead to killing of the aged, weak and vulnerable.

"It is so important not to have the precedent of killing each other in society," Prof. Somerville said.

An Angus Reid poll this summer found 77% of Quebec respondents believed euthanasia should be allowed. The only instance in which Quebecers showed no support is in the case of a person wishing to end their own life because of the death of a spouse.

The poll was inspired by a decision of the Quebec College of Physicians and Surgeons that has asked Ottawa to amend the Criminal Code to allow for euthanasia in specific cases. The formal proposal will be out in the fall.

In 2004, Environics Research Group found 68% of all Canadians approved of euthanasia. In a poll last year it found, given the choice, 44% of Canadian would choose euthanasia and 44% would opt for palliative care.

Bill C-384 is far broader than the laws in Oregon and Washington, the only two jurisdictions in North America where physician-assisted suicide is legal and two of only a handful of jurisdictions in the world that allow it.

Oregon has had physician-assisted suicide for the past 11 years. (Washington made it legal in November.) It allows only those who have been told they have less than six months to live to apply for the lethal medication. In 1998, 25 people were given the drug and in 2008, 88 prescriptions were given. Last year, 54 patients took the lethal medications, 22 died of their underlying disease and 12 were alive at the end of the year.

It is believed that some patients take the drug home as insurance against a painful death but never use it.

Euthanasia, the act of the doctor administering the drug, is forbidden in both states.

Ruth von Fuchs, president of Right To Die Canada, said euthanasia is actually preferable because it allows patients to live longer. Patients might be concerned that they will reach a point when they do not have the strength or manual dexterity to take the drug themselves, she said.

But Prof. Somerville said euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide can never be "simply an individual act."

"The argument that supports legalizing this comes from intense individualism: 'If that's what somebody wants, who am I to stop them?'" she said. "It necessarily involves other people. And you need a complicit society to make it possible through legalizing it. So it dramatically impacts on society."

"They don't see what it means to society ... and let's be blunt in the language we use: you will have doctors killing people and the law authorizing them to do it. Two of secular society's two most important institutions, which are meant to uphold the respect for life, will be changed."

The Canadian Medical Association, for example, is against euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide because it believes a doctor should never take a life.

"It's a central tenet of medical ethics that thou shall not kill, that you first do no harm," said Dr. Blackmer. "This debate is a clash of moralities, but against the most deeply held morality that physicians have."

Pain management has advanced greatly in the past 10 years, he said, meaning it is a rare case in which pain cannot be managed.
"The counter-argument is that euthanasia ends suffering, even if it's for just a few cases. The question is, 'Is that enough of a reason to end a life?' "

Dr. Nuala Kenny, director of bioethics education and research at Dalhousie University in Halifax, said it is easy to be misled by the language of Ms. Lalonde's bill. Someone with a terminal illness can often live for years, so there is a danger someone could take their life simply over the fear of the unknown. The use of the term "mental pain" is also worrying, she said.

"In the Netherlands we know people who have been depressed have been allowed to take their own lives. Grief is suffering and under this legislation it would be perfectly allowed. I don't think people are paying attention to what is being proposed here: death as the answer to any human distress," said Dr. Kenny, who is also a pediatrician and a Catholic nun, but who has never worked in a Catholic institution.

"You don't change the whole way in which medicine in particular interacts with those who are dying or suffering because a small number of people have this extreme understanding of their rights and freedoms."

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Bob Schindler, the father of Terri Schindler Schiavo dies

Today is a sad day for everyone who is dedicated to preventing euthanasia by dehydration. Bob Schindler senior died of a heart attack.

His daughter Terri was intentionally dehydrated to death, not because she was terminally ill and nearing death, but becuase she was cognitively disabled and her husband Michael wanted her to die. She died by a slow and horrific form of euthanasia.

The Schindler family and Bob need to be upheld for everything they had done to try to save the life of their daughter and sister Terri. The horrific reality of death by dehydration for those who are not otherwise dying was made known to the world by the courageous Schindler family who were led by their father Bob.

I ask the question, when did it become acceptable to dehydrate someone to death simply because that person is cognitively disabled?

Please read the comments by Bobby Schindler Jr and follow the link to the website for the Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation that I have included with this blog comment to learn more about the death of a great man.

Alex Schadenberg

Statement from Bobby Schindler Regarding the Death of His Father, Robert Schindler

Recent News


http://www.terrisfight.org/news.php?id=955

For Immediate Release - August 29, 2009

Media Contact:
Chris Tatum
(615) 275-6161
chris@anewpr.com

Statement from Bobby Schindler Regarding the Death of His Father, Robert Schindler

I am heartbroken over the loss of my father and yet I know at this moment he is rejoicing with my sister, Terri. My dad was a man of integrity, character and compassion who was blessed with a close and loving family. He taught all three of his children to respect and value life and to love our fellow man.

Even at the height of the battle to save my sister Terri’s life, when his patience and temperance was near exhaustion, he managed to display a gentleness of spirit. Yet it was his unfathomable strength that allowed him to shoulder up his own heartache and lead us through our darkest hour.

What greater legacy could a man leave behind?


-----------------------------

A Mass of Christian burial with visitation preceding will be scheduled to take place in Philadelphia, PA. Times and location will be announced at a later date.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation, 5562 Central Avenue, Suite 2, Saint Petersburg, FL 33707, phone 727-490-7603.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Doctors admit euthanasia being applied in Czech hospitals

The following article refers to the abuse of morphine in order to cause the death of people in the Czech Republic.

Once again this article depicts a false compassion. A true compassion would lead to a better training in the proper use of analgesics so that physicians stop feeling that they need to abuse the use of morphine.

Further to that, the article presents a very sloppy system for caring for people who are supposedly in the dying phase. People should never be viewed as simply bodies needing an overdose, etc but rather as people who are in need of good and proper care.

I really hope that this article is an exageration of the reality.

Alex Schadenberg

Doctors admit euthanasia being applied in Czech hospitals

http://www.ceskenoviny.cz/news/zpravy/doctors-admit-euthanasia-being-applied-in-czech-hospitals-press/394479


Prague - Some doctors admit that euthanasia is being applied in the Czech Republic not to prolong patients' sufferings in hopeless cases, though it is officially illegal, the daily Mlada fronta Dnes (MfD) reports today.

It is called "wild euthanasia" and it means that doctors intentionally provide the treatment that leads to the patient's death with the aim to terminate his/her suffering, doctor Zdenek Kalvacha told MfD.

A doctor, for instance, administers higher morphine doses to a patient dying of cancer, the daily adds.

MfD writes that some other doctors, too, admit a similar practice in Czech hospitals.

Being asked at a recent meeting of the Czech Doctors' Academy whether someone is convinced that euthanasia is not applied in the Czech Republic, no doctor raised his hand, MfD says.

Many doctors say the rules should be specified for the cases of patients whose further medical treatment is pointless and whose death is inevitable, the daily adds.

Political parties, too, are considering drafting such rules, the paper adds.

The Senate, upper house of Czech parliament rejected the legalisation of euthanasia last September.

Senator Vaclava Domsova (Independents' Association-European Democrats/SNS-ED) submitted a bill on "dignified death" but the upper house turned it down. Its critics, mainly doctors, warned that the bill would legalise intentional killing and could be abused.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Couple seeks euthanasia for their sons in India.

I came across this article today about a farmer and his wife who have asked the President Pratibha Patil for permission to kill their four sons (ages 10 - 16) who have muscular dystrophy.

The problem with this article is that we can only imagine the struggle with caring for four sons with muscular dystrophy but we are not told about the level of care that exists or the lack of care that does not exist.

This is another story of a terrible case that society in India should respond to by providing this family with the necessary care for the family to provide for their children.

We must believe that this family would rather not kill their children and the answer to these cases is to provide the means for the family and not leave them destitute.

The short article with link follows.
Farmer couple seeks 'mercy killing' for four minor sons

http://www.ptinews.com/news/243374_Farmer-couple-seeks--mercy-killing--for-four-minor-sons
STAFF WRITER 22:28 HRS IST

New Delhi, Aug 22 (PTI) A farmer and his wife in Uttar Pradesh have sought President Pratibha Patil's permission for the mercy killing of all their four minor sons afflicted by a genetic disease that has confined them to bed.

The four, aged 10 to 16 years, have been afflicted by muscular dystrophy, leaving them in a vegetative state.

"My sons cannot stand on their feet nor can they move their body below the neck," said the children's father Jeet Narayan of Bashi village of Mirzapur district.

"I appealed before the officials, the administration and the state government for help but no one is there to listen to our plight," Narayan told Times Now, as he was shown carrying his sons on his arms to bed.

Narayan has written to the President, the Prime Minister and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister for the mercy killing of his sons.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Deep Sedation, Dehydration and Euthanasia

Alex Schadenberg
By Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Yesterday, I was interviewed by LifeSiteNews. The article is below.

I want to make it clear that Deep Sedation itself is not a moral problem, it becomes a moral problem when it is done with the intention of causing the persons death, usually by dehydration.

Deep Sedation is a very effective palliative technique for people who are suffering from intractable pain. This type of pain is less responsive to morphine. But good palliative care physicians know that you do not need to keep the person sedated until death in order to provide a great benefit for the person. Often a person can be sedated for several days and then brought out of sedation. That person has often experienced a physical relaxation that enables them to once again be awake without suffering from intractable pain.

Therefore, the proper use of Deep Sedation has benefits and should not be discouraged, but deep sedation can be abused whereby a person, who is not yet otherwise dying, is sedated and then dehydrated to death. This is a form of "slow" euthanasia.

British Doctors Practising "Slow" Euthanasia through Deep Sedation: BBC Report

By Hilary White

LONDON, August 18, 2009 (LifeSiteNews) 

A BBC report has revealed that physicians in the UK are increasingly seeing and using "continuous deep sedation" as a form of "slow" euthanasia. Adam Brimelow, BBC News health correspondent, writes that the use of continuous deep sedation, also known as "terminal sedation" is becoming more common in the UK and may be the way physicians are skirting the law prohibiting direct euthanasia.

Research has shown that 16.5 percent of all deaths in the UK are associated with continuous deep sedation until death, a number twice that of Belgium and the Netherlands, both countries that already have legalised direct euthanasia.

Deep sedation can be used intermittently or continuously until death, and the depth of sedation can vary from a lowered state of consciousness to unconsciousness. Under UK law, patients can give a directive to medical staff that they refuse 'palliative care' or 'terminal sedation', or 'any drug likely to suppress respiration'.

Alex Schadenberg, the head of Canada's Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, said that continuous deep sedation is a technique that can be used ethically in cases of dying patients to alleviate intractable pain, such as neuropathic pain that does not respond to morphine, but the ethics depends upon the situation and the intention.

"It's important to make the distinction," Schadenberg told LifeSiteNews.com, "between what we do with someone who is nearing death and someone who is in pain but not dying." In some cases, he said, patients who are not dying but may be suffering are put into deep sedation, and then dehydrated to death - a use that is always unethical.

However, "if your patient is nearing death and is experiencing organ failure, you really can't be putting food and fluid into a body that can't use the fluids. When the body is shutting down, this is a natural part of the dying process. But when they're not dying, like Terri Schiavo, or someone who is experiencing great pain associated with cancer, that is a different issue, because then we are talking about causing that person's death.

"[Deep sedation] can be a backdoor route to euthanasia if it is used unethically," he said. "The issue is intention. The intention must be the alleviation of pain and suffering. Even a long-term sedation can be ethical as long as the person is not being dehydrated to death. A good palliative care physician won't use the technique very often."

Last year, Dutch researchers found that the use of continuous deep sedation until death was becoming more widespread in the Netherlands where direct euthanasia is already legal. In 2001, researchers found that in six European countries deep sedation was used in 8.5 percent of all deaths in patients with cancer and other diseases.

"The increased use of continuous deep sedation for patients nearing death in the Netherlands suggests that this practice is increasingly considered as part of regular medical practice," said lead researcher Judith Rietjens, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Public Health at Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam.

"Also, the use of continuous deep sedation may in some situations be a relevant alternative to the use of euthanasia for patients," Rietjens said.

Deep sedation is associated now with approximately 10 percent of all deaths in the Netherlands, an increase that coincided with an increase in public disquiet about the numbers of active euthanasia cases - numbers that have since declined.

Schadenberg said that the answer to the puzzle is simple: "The statistics of active euthanasia have gone down in the Netherlands because they are simply resorting to deep sedation instead.

"But in fact this simply means that patients are being euthanised slowly in conjunction with the withdrawal of fluids. It is why this is being called 'slow euthanasia'. A lethal injection is quicker, but in fact the ethics are no different. Both intend death."

Judith Rietjens confirmed this, saying, "We can see in our study that those sub-groups where we saw an increase of continuous deep sedation - just in those sub-groups - we saw a lowering of the frequency of euthanasia."

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

EPC response to Quebec euthanasia poll

A recent Angus Reid poll in Quebec of 800 adults (August 4, 5) found that 77% of the respondents agree with Euthanasia, 75% of the respondents supported the Collége des médecins du Québec opening the euthanasia debate with 72% of the respondents believing that Canadians should have the right to refuse medical treatment that could save their lives.

Link to the poll information: http://www.cyberpresse.ca/actualites/quebec-canada/sante/200908/10/01-891423-les-quebecois-favorables-a-leuthanasie.php

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC) questions whether the respondents actually knew what euthanasia is? Many Canadians confuse euthanasia with the right to refuse medical treatment.

Legalizing euthanasia would give (usually a physician) the right to directly and intentionally cause the death of another person. Assisted suicide means giving (usually a physician) the right to be directly and intentionally involved with causing the death of another person.

Euthanasia and assisted suicide are often viewed as issues related to personal autonomy but they in fact represent a loss of autonomy since euthanasia and assisted suicide require another person to be directly and intentionally involved with causing a persons death.

The validity of such a poll comes into question when one considers the context of the poll.

Since Canadians already have the right to refuse medical treatment that could save their lives. It is interesting that there is less support for a measure that they have the right to already. It may be that most Canadians are unaware that they have the right to refuse medical treatment. Would the level of support for euthanasia change if the respondents knew that the right to refuse medical treatment already existed?

It is very concerning that this poll indicated that 58% of the respondents supported euthanasia for people who were not terminally ill but living with an incurable illness. The poll also indicated that 40% of the respondents supported euthanasia for newborns with disabilities. In the Netherlands the Groningen Protocol was developed to euthanize newborns with disabilities. People with disabilities need to be concerned about negative attitudes that exist toward people who live with disabilities and incurable conditions.

In March 2005 EPC participated in an Angus Reid survey of 1122 participants from across Canada. Our polling found that the responses of Canadians changed based on the context of the question.

Our poll included a series of ten questions. The first question we asked resulted in a similar support for assisted suicide as the recent poll. We then asked eight further questions with the tenth question being a near restatement of the first question. The response to the tenth question was: 45% of Canadians supported the legalization of assisted suicide, 39% of Canadians opposed the legalization of assisted suicide while 16% were undecided. In other words, when people have a chance to think about assisted suicide with respect to its related issues within societal context then the support for assisted suicide drops.

The response to the some of the other questions were very interesting.

• 77% believed that vulnerable Canadians might be euthanised without consent, even with safeguards in place.

• 75% believed that recent assisted suicide cases are not reason enough to change the current law.

• 69% believed that the law should discourage suicide by restricting the promotion of devices and methods.

• 67% believed that legalizing assisted suicide would increase the suicide rate.

• 54% believed that guaranteeing pain control and good hospice care was a higher priority than legalizing euthanasia or assisted suicide.

• 69% are more concerned about protecting vulnerable Canadians than legalizing assisted suicide while 16% were undecided.

It is important to note that our poll showed that the majority of Canadians were more concerned about protecting vulnerable Canadians and guaranteeing pain control and good hospice care rather than legalizing assisted suicide.

Therefore the real support for euthanasia or assisted suicide can only be determined once it has been placed within a social context.

EPC is currently working to defeat Bill C-384, the private members bill that would legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide for Canadians who live with chronic physical or mental pain.

Alex Schadenberg

Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Office: 1-877-439-3348, Email: info@epcc.ca

Thursday, July 16, 2009

MP's to debate euthasia in House of Commons

Rarely does a writer cover an issue as well as Hugh Anderson has written about Bill C-384, Francine Lalonde's private members bill that is scheduled for debate in September would legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide in Canada.

Alex

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Euthanasia bill passes first stephttp://www.vancouversun.com/news/Euthanasia+bill+passes+first+step/1672857/story.html

Next up, MPs to debate measure in Commons

By HUGH ANDERSON, Freelance - Montreat Gazette & Vancouver Sun - July 10, 2009
Wrapped in euphemisms and double-talk, another long step toward making it legal in Canada for doctors to deliberately end the life of patients in certain circumstances has been taken.

Bloc Québécois Francine Lalonde's private member's bill to accomplish that has received first reading in the House of Commons. It is likely within the next month or two to receive the standard one hour of debate by MPs at second reading, unless an election is called. A majority vote in favour could send her startlingly brief bill for study by a Commons committee.

Startlingly also, among those eligible to be legally killed by a doctor might be depressed 18-year-old teenagers who refuse their medications. A doctor would also no longer commit a crime by supplying a lethal dose to enable such depressed teenagers to kill themselves. That could be your grandchild if Lalonde's bill became law in its present form.

It's all a long way from what many people think of as a suitable case for euthanasia: an elderly person who is terminally ill and in excruciating pain who repeatedly and unmistakably asks for death. There is probably the support of most Canadians for exempting your doctor from a murder charge in that strictly limited case.

This kind of obfuscation is a striking characteristic of campaigners for the so-called "right to die with dignity," which in reality means making it legal for somebody else to kill you or to help you commit suicide.

After previous columns on the ominous implications for seniors, I received complaints from readers over using the word kill to describe euthanasia. But what else is it? The act may well be for compassionate motives, but it is what it is.

In her comments on this third attempt to legalize intended killing of patients, Lalonde claimed that experience shows that "abuses and the hypothetical slippery slope" have "not in any way become reality."

But consider the Netherlands, where so-called mercy killing has been formally legal since 2002 and factually legal for three decades. Several government reports have acknowledged that many people have been legally euthanized without their knowledge or consent.

In Oregon, state officials have conceded that they really don't know how many people have been prescribed a lethal dose of drugs to kill themselves, only those that have been reported by doctors.

Universally among existing and proposed euthanasia and assisted-suicide laws, what the legislation actually says is not at all what the supporters of it campaigned on, and what they said the safeguards would prevent. Lalonde's bill is no exception. Here are examples:

- The bill says any person age 18 or over who "appears to be lucid" and who has tried or refused available treatments and "continues to experience severe physical or mental pain without any prospect of relief" would be eligible to be assisted to commit suicide if the rules are followed. Note that "mental pain." Seniors who have lived through periods of deep depression will recall that at the time there seemed to be no prospect of relief.

- The bill says that certifying the person is suffering such pain or is terminally ill would be up to medical practitioners, defined as "a person duly qualified by provincial law to practise medicine." Does this include my dermatologist, my podiatrist? For "mental pain," there should surely be a requirement to consult a psychiatrist?

- The bill's wording means that people living with disabilities or with chronic conditions would be vulnerable. Such sufferers can be considered by others, and often are, as having no prospect of relief and wishing to die. The sufferers themselves may well have a different opinion.

- The bill's wording would allow you to be killed legally when you have become incompetent to make the choice, if you had earlier given written authority while you appeared to be lucid to another person to act on your behalf when you no longer appear to be lucid. Better be careful about the wording of your mandate or advance directive.

- The bill's wording has no definition of terminal illness. A diagnosis could become an immediate death warrant, no matter what your chances of survival might be or if the diagnosis is wrong.

- The bill's restriction of eligibility based on age would probably be ruled unconstitutional if it became law and was legally tested. As in the Netherlands - where it is now legal for doctors to kill infants, if parents agree, if they believe their patients' suffering is intolerable or incurable- this might mean that eventually babies could become eligible.

Canada's Euthanasia Prevention Coalition has urged Canadians to contact their federal MP to oppose Lalonde's bill.

Its website www.epcc.ca provides sample letters you can download and use as a model.

"This bill is not about choice," coalition director Alex Schadenberg warns. "It's protection for doctors."

Email seniors@sarabethmanagement.com.

Quebec physicians tentatively propose legal euthanasia

The interesting thing about the article (article follows my comment) is that Dr. Yves Robert from the Quebec College of Physicians only refers to the use of analgesics that may result in the death of the patient. It is not euthanasia if the physician intends to control the pain and not kill the patient.

There are approved guidelines that a physician follows to determine the increases in analgesics. If the physician follows the guidelines (within reason) then the physician has nothing to worry about.

It is euthanasia if the physician just gives the patient a lethal dose of analgesic with the intention of causing the patients death. Intention is difficult to prove but if the physician simply gives the patient a lethal dose of analgesic without attempting to follow the guidelines then the physician should be charged with euthanasia.

If the Quebec College of Physicians allows physicians to lethally inject their patients with overdoses (turning a blind eye to the approved protocols for analgesic use) they will be erasing the distinction between caring for people and killing people. People will lose faith in the ethics of their physician and they will fear entering palliative care because the lines between caring and killing will be blurred.

The other possibility is that the Quebec College of Physicians will allow lethal doses (non-palliative) of barbituates to be injected into patients when they are experiencing particularly painful symptoms. If this is their intention then they are in fact wanting to legalize euthanasia through the back-door.

In other words, the Quebec College is using their concern for physicians who need to use large doses of analgesics as the straw man arguement in order to allow them to give Quebec physicians the right to directly and intentionally cause the death of their patients by lethal injection.

We should not be surprised that the timing of the Quebec College of Physicians decision will take place at approximately the same time as Bill C-384 goes to a Second Reading vote.

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition needs your help. Please become a member by joining online by paypal on our website at: www.euthanasiaprevention.on.ca

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The article that I am refering to is: Quebec physicians tentatively propose legal euthanasia

College's task force on ethics believes province's society has evolved to the point that it would be acceptable in limited circumstances

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/quebec-physicians-tentatively-propose-legal-euthanasia/article1219957/

Rhéal Séguin

Quebec City — From Thursday's Globe and Mail - July 16, 2009

With great caution, the Quebec College of Physicians is prepared to cross the line on the controversial debate over euthanasia and propose that it be included “as part of the appropriate care in certain particular circumstances.”

After examining the issue for three years, the College's task force on ethics concluded that Quebec society has evolved to the point where it could tolerate euthanasia in specific circumstances. The task force's recommendation will likely be part of a “reflection” document the College will release next fall, hoping that a public debate on the issue will pressure the federal government to eventually amend the criminal code.

“We are being very cautious in our approach,” said the College's secretary, Yves Robert. “Avoiding the debate contributes to the general hypocrisy around this issue. To say that it doesn't happen because it is illegal is completely stupid. … We have to stop hiding our head in the sand,” Dr. Robert said.

It is common knowledge that physicians often have no choice but to constantly increase medication such as morphine to alleviate the pain and suffering of terminally ill patients.

Sometimes, the pain is so unbearable that the amount of painkillers or analgesics used to control it can be fatal. And this, according to the Quebec College of Physicians, can be viewed as a form of euthanasia.

“The question here is to decide whether a drop in dosage or an increase in dosage constitutes a criminal act,” Dr. Robert said. “We may go as far as to recommend that in certain cases, where the pain is unbearable, the amount of analgesic required could correspond to a form of euthanasia.”

The College wants to avoid a divisive confrontation between those who are for or against euthanasia, saying such a debate would solve nothing. Instead, the debate should be about the doctor's role in accompanying a terminally ill patient toward the inevitability of death, offering as much dignity and medical assistance as possible. “There's not a politician or a lawyer that can tell me what that entails,” Dr. Robert said.

The College says there are three conditions required in order to amend the criminal code, which currently defines euthanasia as a criminal act. The first would require that the decision be made in accordance with the patient's will. A physician alone could not decide, Dr. Robert said. The second condition would require that clear rules be established to protect society from abuses. And thirdly, the doctor has to be part of the decision-making process and not someone who simply carries out orders.

Quebec physicians are adamant in stating their position excludes assisted suicides, which is practised in Switzerland and in some parts of the United States. There have been a few rare cases where Canadians have died at the assisted-suicide clinic Dignitas in Switzerland, but the College opposes the practice.

Right-to-die groups in Quebec believe the province's College of Physicians has taken a “bold, cautious and realistic” approach that will have considerable impact on the rest of the country.

Social worker Yvon Bureau, who has spent 25 years promoting the right to euthanasia, called the College's proposal a major step forward.

“I believe this is huge,” Mr. Bureau said. “We need to avoid having people commit suicide or die under terrible circumstances. About 80 per cent of the Quebec population supports the right to medical assistance in dying. All of this would take place in the course of the relationship between the doctor and the patient, as well as the family.”

Mr. Bureau hopes the debate will persuade the Quebec government to adopt an “end of life” policy that will recognize each individual's right to die with dignity. However, he anticipates strong opposition from groups that fear that such a policy may lead to abuses.

The College of Physicians is expected to table its final proposal in November.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Finlay promotes life and death with dignity - Coombs Lee considers life to be a prolonged imprisonment

By Alex Schadenberg

Rarely do you read two articles published on the same day that promote an opposite point of view. Today (July 15, 2009) those two articles came up in my inbox, one from the UK and one from America.

The first article was written by Barbara Coombs Lee who is the leader of the Compassion & Choices suicide lobby group in America. Her article - Healthcare Reform and the Price of Torture
promotes a pessimistic point of view about life, one that would lead one to consider death as preferable to growing old, living with disability or living with chronic or life-limiting medical conditions.

The second article was written by Baroness Finlay, an independent member of the House of Lords in the UK and a Professor of Palliative Medicine at the University of Cardiff who wrote an article titled - Don’t fear death. Enjoy the setting sun.

My first reaction to the Coombs Lee article was how the concept of Choice with connection to euthanasia and assisted suicide is an illusion. The suicide lobby wants you to believe that legalizing euthanasia or assisted suicide would grant choice and freedom for people to have their life ended based solely on autonomous decisions for competent people.

For instance Coombs Lee states:
"Standard routine is to torture those in the process of dying by inflicting upon them a host of toxic chemicals, invasive machinery and painful surgeries. It's the American way of dying --- agonized and prolonged imprisonment in an intensive care unit, pinned down under a maze of tubes and machines, enduring one medical procedure after another, unable to hold or be held by loved ones."
If end-of-life care in America is based on torturing people who are dying, then it is far more reasonable to find your nearest veterinarian and be "put to sleep."

Coombs Lee continues by stating:
Oncologists entice their dying patients into bearing one more, experimental round of chemotherapy almost certain to intensify toxic symptoms without extending life. Surgeons repair the fractures and amputate the limbs of people clearly only a few weeks from death. The newest medical specialists, "hospital intensivists" deftly thread tubes into failing hearts and attach ventilators to decrepit lungs. Much of the pain they inflict does nothing but monitor the chemistry and pressures of internal crevices and gather the information necessary to thwart a body trying to shut itself down.
Coombs Lee seems to view physicians as the enemy. She describes them as being primarily concerned about invoking extra-ordinary burdensome interventions with no hope of benefit. With Coombs Lee description of care one would have to conclude that physicians are no better than sadistic warriors from another time.

Does Coombs Lee believe that physicians intentionally invoke pain on their patients because physicians generally oppose assisted suicide?

But Coombs Lee has the answer for medical care in America. She is suggesting that health care reform can end the torture by promoting assisted suicide. She states:
“Like all cultural shifts, it must start with the people. The people --- you --- deserve to be able to choose a healthcare plan driven by what patients need, not what profit demands. You deserve a system that pays your doctor to talk with you about peaceful endings when death is imminent. One that pays for hospice care in the home as readily as it pays for intensive care in the hospital. 

“Raise your voice. Make your views known. Talk to your own doctor and to your family. Take action with calls to members of Congress and letters to local news outlets. Ask for healthcare reform to include payment for your doctor to talk to you about your end-of-life wishes. We make it easy for you. Tell them you reject torture at the end of life for yourself and you resent the needless torture of others. Joining together, let's change the American way of dying.”
Notice how Coombs Lee never mentions that she is actually promoting assisted suicide. If she were truly concerned with caring for people who would otherwise be tortured, she would clearly state that she is lobbying government to legalize assisted suicide.

She also doesn’t tell you what assisted suicide is. Assisted Suicide isn’t about choice, or freedom or autonomy, it is giving physicians the right to be directly and intentionally involved with causing my death.

Coombs Lee is saying that the way to get healthcare reform in America is by legalizing assisted suicide. She does say:
"You deserve a system that pays your doctor to talk with you about peaceful endings when death is imminent"
Doctors can already speak to you about end-of-life options, but they cannot speak to you about assisted suicide (directly and intentionally causing your death).

How does giving physicians the right to be directly and involved with causing your death give you choice. It only gives your physician more choice.

Baroness Finlay presents a positive view of life, of aging gracefully and dying with real dignity. She starts her article by stating:
“So why are we increasingly fearful of growing old? People can consider longer working lives to contribute actively to society, precisely because health is better than ever. They can share their wisdom, accrued over years, with others. The trick in being an inspirational older person is perhaps in attitude rather than in physical performance. Of course, none of us wants to be a burden or to feel lonely. However, the future for our connectedness with others, maintaining our role in life and independent living, has never been greater.”
Notice the difference in attitude. Finlay recognizes that life is improving for the elderly whereas Coombs Lee presents life as a type of trap.

Finlay continues by stating:
After spending much of my life treating people who are very seriously ill and dying, I have come to be in awe of death and to realise the amazing uncertainties of life. I have been privileged to be part of a revolution — it’s nothing short of that — in the way that people are treated.
Finlay then extols her experience with the current medical system by stating.
It is paradoxical that, at the same time as we have seen ground-breaking advances in the treatment of serious illness, we see increasingly strident demands for euthanasia. The pressure seems to come from fear of tomorrow rather than from the reality of today. Those who commend euthanasia usually frame their proposals around terminal or chronic illness. But in reality they base their case on personal wish alone and see assisted suicide as another “end of life choice”.
She then explains why the attitude and philosophy of Coombs Lee would not create new choices but in fact exploit people in their most vulnerable condition and eliminate end-of-life choice. She states:
Their demands assume that everyone who is seriously ill can say without difficulty whether they want to be cared for or to end their lives and that no one ever comes under pressure to “do the decent thing”. The real world isn’t like that. Among the thousands of seriously ill patients I have treated, the vast majority are vulnerable to influence. Most people getting old are aware that death is approaching; they want to talk about dying. They often seek reassurance that they are still of value and worth, that they can contribute to society. Very few wanting to talk about dying actually want to die.
Finlay concludes her comments by stating:
We should remember that what we read in the papers and see on TV, whether it is a death from swine flu or a suicide in Switzerland, is the exception rather than the norm — it wouldn’t be news otherwise. And, when we feel inclined to pessimism about the future, we should reflect on what earlier generations had to cope with and ask ourselves how much of our gloom stems from our own changing expectations.
She ended her article with these comments:
It is great to able to grow old. So perhaps we should enjoy the glory of the setting sun.
I choose to follow the direction of Finlay over Coombs Lee. Finlay is about caring for people until they die with dignity whereas Coombs Lee wants us to fear death and give physicians the right to directly and intentionally cause your death.

I believe in Caring not Killing.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Edward Thomas Downes and his wife Joan die at Dignitas suicide clinic.

The media are in an uproar about the sad suicide death of a British conductor and his wife at the Dignitas Clinic.

Last week the House of Lords in the UK voted down a proposal by Lord Falconer that would have made death tourism a right for citizens of the UK.

Dr Peter Saunders, the director of the Care Not Killing Alliance in the UK stated to the BBC News that:
"The current law is clear and right and the House of Lords were wise not to approve any change to it."
He further stated that:
"With imminent health cuts, growing numbers of elderly people and increasing levels of elder abuse the very last thing we need is to put vulnerable people, many of whom already think they are a financial or emotional burden to relatives, carers and the state, under pressure to end their lives through a change in the law."
People need to understand that the Dignitas clinic views euthanasia and assisted suicide as a human right. We understand that Joan had cancer, but we do not know whether she was terminally ill. It appears though that Edward was not dying but experiencing symptoms related to old age.

I am concerned when the media creates a push for elderly people to view their lives as not worth living. People should be treated with dignity and not pressured to end their lives.

This case should be viewed for what it is, another tragic case of a couple who have killed themselves in difficult circumstances.

New Threats in Canada
Canadians need to understand that Bill C-384, the private members bill in the Canadian parliament that would legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide in Canada, would allow for death clinics to operate in Canada.

The bill would allow euthanasia and assisted suicide and would allow death by lethal injection.

The bill does not limit euthanasia and assisted suicide to terminally ill persons but rather allows the direct and intentional killing of people who are suffering physical or mental pain.

The bill doe not limit euthanasia and assisted suicide to Canadian citizens and would therefore allow Canada to become a destination for death tourism.

The bill does not define terminal illness.

The bill bases mental capacity on whether or not a person "appears to be lucid."

Canadians need to defeat Bill C-384 or we will become the next Switzerland.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Care Not Killing welcomes Lords' decision to reject assisted suicide amendment

Press Release
July 8, 2009

The Care Not Killing Alliance has welcomed the House of Lords decision to reject, by 194 votes to 141, Lord Falconer's amendment (173) to the Coroners and Justice Bill which would have exempted from investigation and prosecution those who help terminally ill people to travel abroad to seek assisted suicide in countries where such actions are legal – in effect, Switzerland.

Care Not Killing Director Dr Peter Saunders said, 'The House of Lords has wisely rejected this amendment. Today we have seen over 30 leaders of disabled people's organisations in an open letter, along with doctors' leaders in a comprehensive clinical briefing joining their voices to those of senior legal figures who last week labeled the amendment “ill-defined, unsound and unnecessary”.'

'The amendment is vaguely worded and unworkable and its safeguards illusory. The phrase “terminally ill” is not further defined and could apply to people with a very wide range of chronic progressive illnesses some with life expectancy stretching to decades. The assessing doctors are not required to know, to see nor to examine the person in question nor even to review the case notes; nor to possess the requisite training, experience and skill necessary to make a sound judgement about prognosis and capacity. The amendment is thereby wide open to manipulation and abuse.'

'Lord Falconer's amendment would have put vulnerable people at risk. At a time of economic recession with imminent health cuts, growing numbers of elderly people, and increasing levels of elder abuse the very last thing we need is to put elderly, sick or disabled people, many of whom already believe they are a financial or emotional burden to relatives, carers and the state, under pressure to end their lives through a change in the law.'

'The current law is clear and right. The Suicide Act 1961 has stood the test of time and gives a blanket prohibition to all assistance with suicide. The penalties the current law holds in reserve give it both a stern face to deter would-be abusers and a kind heart to enable judges to exercise compassion in hard cases. This amendment would have created legal confusion by loosening a law that the government is actually trying to tighten to stop internet suicides. What is not broken does not need fixing'

'Passing the Falconer amendment would have irreparably damaged the law by establishing an exception to the Suicide Act. The next step in the incremental strategy would have been to argue for 'equality' by legalising assisted suicide here. The House of Lords has wisely rejected it.'

Links:
Hansard: http://www.carenotkilling.org.uk/pdf/Hansard_-_Debate_on_Falconer_Amendment.pdf
Article - Disabled Peer Against Assisted Suicide: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/jul/07/disabled-peer-against-assisted-suicide/print
Article - Lords reject amendment to assisted suicide law: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/lords-reject-amended-law-on-assisted-suicide-1736329.html
Article - Assisted dying plea turned down: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1198205/Assisted-dying-plea-turned-Lords-emotional-speech-disabled-peer.html?printingPage=true

Notes for Editors
Care Not Killing is a UK-based alliance bringing together around 50 organisations - human rights and disability rights organisations, health care and palliative care groups, faith-based organisations groups - and thousands of concerned individuals.

We have three key aims:

- to promote more and better palliative care;
- to ensure that existing laws against euthanasia and assisted suicide are not weakened or repealed during the lifetime of the current Parliament;
- to inform public opinion further against any weakening of the law.

We seek to attract the broadest support among health care professionals, allied health services and others opposed to euthanasia by campaigning on the basis of powerful arguments underpinned by the latest, well-researched and credible evidence.

Key groups signed up to Care Not Killing include: The Association for Palliative Medicine, the United Kingdom Disabled People's Council, RADAR, the Christian Medical Fellowship, the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales, the Church of England and the Medical Ethics Alliance.

For more information, broadcasting bids and media inquiries:
Media Intelligence Partners
Alistair Thompson - 07970 162225 or 0203 008 8145

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Assisted Suicide amendment defeated in the UK parliament

I just received a notice from Peter Saunders, the director of the Care Not Killing Alliance in the UK that the assisted suicide amendment in the UK parliament was defeated.

He stated:
Falconer's amendment just defeated by 194 to 141 - a bigger margin than the defeat of the Joffe Bill!!

A fantastic result!

Well done all!

Peter Saunders

This is an incredible victory considering the fact that the amendment to the bill was based on giving UK citizens the green light to travel to Switzerland to temporarily visit the death clinic without any worry of legal reprisal.

The reason the assisted suicide law is being changed in the UK is to ensure that predators who counsel others via the internet to commit suicide can be prosecuted for their crime. Falconer's amendment would have given the UK a crazy dichotomy within their legislation. It would have outlawed assisting a suicide and also allowed death tourism.

Congratulations Peter and job well done.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Luxembourg palliative care guidelines promote euthanasia

By Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition


The recent legalization of euthanasia in Luxembourg has already resulted in a change to the role of palliative care in the tiny European nation.

Under the title: New Guide for Palliative care in Luxembourg, the information states:
A booklet has just been produced in Luxembourg explaining the new law that was passed on March 16th, relating to palliative care and end of life support, which is renowned from the law on euthanasia and assisted suicide. Information and documentation are being produced under the leadership of the National Commission on audit and evaluation set up to oversee the implementation of the law on euthanasia and assisted suicide of terminal or serious and incurable diseases.
The role of palliative care has been changed in the new guide to include: The provision of a substance to end life.

Grand Duke Henri
The legalization of euthanasia in Luxembourg resulted in a constitutional crisis because Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg refused to sign the bill into law forcing the Duchy of Luxembourg to change its constitution by removing the power of the Grand Duke to sign legislation before it becomes the law of the land.

Grand Duke Henri argued that the legalization of euthanasia was unnecessary because the fear of suffering for people with terminal conditions can be effectively treated by palliative care. He further argued that it was unjust to legalize the practise of killing people and that his conscience could not permit him to sign such a bill into law.

The newsreport went on to say that:
The aim of this "Guide to Palliative Care" is to explain the basic principles and key provisions of the law relating to palliative care, the advance directive and support purposes only. It also summarises the various possibilities that already exist or are under development.
To obtain the booklet or for more information, contact Omega 90 (Association luxembourgeoise de soins palliatifs et d‘accompagnement de personnes en fin de vie et en deuil)

138, rue Adolphe Fischer
L-1521 Luxembourg
Tel: 29 77 89-1
Email: omega90@pt.lu

Link to the news article: http://station.lu/newsDetails.cfm?id=23929

Friday, June 12, 2009

An analysis of Bill C-384: An act to amend the Criminal Code (right to die with dignity)

Summary Bill C-384:

• Bill C-384 would legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide in Canada.
(For the purpose of the analysis, euthanasia and assisted suicide will be referred to as “intended death”.)
• Bill C-384 does not restrict intended death to Canadian citizens. (The bill could make Canada a destination for Suicide Tourists and Suicide Clinics).
• The person would need to be at least 18 years old.
• The person may refuse appropriate treatments and still die by an intended death. (A medical practitioner cannot determine that there is no prospect of relief from pain if the person refuses appropriate treatments).
• Bill C-384 allows intended death for people who experience depression or other chronic mental conditions.
• Bill C-384 does not limit intended death to the terminally ill and it does not define terminal illness.
• Bill C-384 measures competency based on “appearing to be lucid”. The term “appearing to be lucid” does not assure that the person is actually lucid.
• Bill C-384 would allows intended death for incompetent people stated while competent their intentions.
• The language of the bill is not clear whether medical practitioners are the only persons who can intend the death of an incompetent person.
• Bill C-384 would requires at least two medical practitioners to confirm the diagnosis in writing. (The bill does not prohibit doctor shopping).
• Bill C-384 would require that all requests for intended death be made free of duress. (This is an illusion. No assurances are built into the bill)
• Bill C-384 would require the medical practitioner to inform the person of all alternatives. (There is no requirement to try effective treatments).
• Bill C-384 would assure that the person may revoke their request at any time. (This is an illusion. This bill allows for the intended death of incompetent people.)
• Bill C-384 would require the medical practitioner to provide confirmation of the diagnosis to the coroner. This is a form of after-the-fact reporting. The medical practitioner is only required to a file a report after the person has died. This is only a safeguard for the medical practitioner and not the person who is dead.
• The definition of medical practitioner is not limited to a physician.

The complete analysis of Bill C-384:
On May 13, 2009 Francine Lalonde MP (BQ - La Pointe-de-l’ÃŽle) introduced Bill C-384: An Act to amend the Criminal Code (right to die with dignity).

In June 2008 Lalonde introduced Bill C-562 and in June 2005 Lalonde introduced Bill C-407. Bill C-384 is identical to Bill C-562 while Bill C-407 was very similar.

Lalonde’s husband Guy Lemarche is the communications director of the euthanasia lobby group - Association Québécoise pour la Droit de Mourir dans la Dignité.

Bill C-384 acts by amending subsections 222(7) and subsection 241(2) of the Criminal Code.

Section 222 is the homicide provision within the criminal code. Bill C-384 legalizes euthanasia by amending subsection 222(7) of the Criminal Code.

Euthanasia is a deliberate act undertaken by one person with the intention of ending the life of another person to relieve that person’s suffering, where the act is the cause of death. (Of Life and Death - 1995)

Section 241 is the assisted suicide provision within the criminal code. Bill C-384 legalizes assisted suicide by amending subsection 241(2) of the criminal code.

Assisted suicide is the act of intentionally killing oneself with the assistance of another who provides the knowledge, means or both. (Of Life and Death - 1995)

Bill C-384 amends the Criminal Code by adding to subsections 222(7) and 241(2) exceptions whereby the law is circumvented.

• Bill C-384 states that the person must be at least eighteen years old. This “safeguard” may be unconstitutional because it limits what is determined by the bill to be appropriate medical treatment only based on the age of the person. Since the constitution recognizes that everyone is equal under the law, therefore it may be unconstitutional to limit the rights of individuals, based on age, without good reason.

• Bill C-384 states that the person is eligible: “after trying or expressly refusing the appropriate treatments available that they continue to experience severe physical or mental pain without any prospect of relief.”

A person is eligible if they experience severe physical pain without any prospect of relief.

Physical and mental pain can always be mitigated. Modern palliative care has substantially improved over the past 30 years. Medicine has not solved every concern with pain and symptom management, but the concept of experiencing physical pain without any prospect of relief is a sign of a patient who has not been appropriately cared for and not a reason for intended death.

Bill C-384 directly threatens the lives of people with disabilities and/or people with chronic conditions. People with disabilities and chronic conditions are often perceived as being without any prospect of relief. These same people will usually view their life experience differently from those who are making judgement of their quality of life.

A person is eligible if they experience severe mental pain without any prospect of relief.

Chronic depression and mental pain is always treatable. Further, one must question the concept of intending the death of a person who experiences chronic depression or mental pain because you can never be sure that the person is competent to consent. Remember the bill states you must only “appear to be lucid.”

Bill C-384 does not require medical practitioners refer people with mental pain to a specialist.

Since a person is eligible if they have refused appropriate treatments that are available. How can a medical practitioner determine that the mental pain has no prospect of relief if the person can refuse appropriate treatments?

• The bill states that the person is eligible if: they suffer from a terminal illness. Bill C-384 does not define terminal illness.

Many people live with a terminal illness but are not actively dying. My step-father died 28 months after he was diagnosed with terminal cancer and given 6 months to live.

Bill C-384 would have qualified my step-father for an intended death when he was diagnosed.

• Bill C-384 states that the person is eligible if: “the person has provided a medical practitioner, while appearing to be lucid, with two written requests more than 10 days apart expressly stating the person’s free and informed consent to opt to die.”

The assumption that someone is competent when they “appear to be lucid” is questionable at best. To appear to be lucid cannot be considered an appropriate measure for competency. In other words, Bill C-384 would allow an intended death upon someone who may not actually be competent.

The safeguard related to making two written requests more than 10 days apart is to prove the lasting intent of the person. This safeguard is an illusion because the person who makes the request only needs to “appear to be lucid”.

• Bill C-384 states that if: “the person has designated in writing with free and informed consent, before two witnesses with no personal interest in the death of the person, another person to act on his or her behalf with any medical practitioner when the person does not appear to be lucid”.

This means that a person can have an intended death if they have made the request in a valid advanced directive.

It is unclear whether the person who does the act of intended death of the incompetent person must be a medical practitioner. The bill states that “another person can act on his or her behalf with any medical practitioner when the person does not appear to be lucid.” Because the bill states that another person can act on his or her behalf with any medical practitioner, therefore it is unclear whether or not that means that the act referred to is the intended death or consenting to the intended death.

• Bill C-384 requires that written confirmation of the diagnosis has been received from at least two medical practitioners. The bill does not preclude the practice of doctor shopping. In the state of Oregon, people who are denied assisted suicide from one doctor will be referred to another doctor by Compassion & Choices. In 2008, 53 of the 60 assisted suicide deaths in Oregon were facilitated by the lobby group Compassion & Choices.

• Bill C-384 requires “the medical practitioner to assure that there are no reasonable grounds to believe that the written requests for euthanasia and assisted suicide were made under duress or while a person was not lucid.”

This safeguard is designed to guarantee competency. This safeguard is an illusion because the person making the request only needs to “appear to be lucid”.

• Bill C-384 requires that “the medical practitioner has informed the person of the consequences of the request for euthanasia or assisted suicide and of the alternatives that are available to the person.”

This supposed safeguard is designed to guarantee that the person is aware of the available options. This safeguard is an illusion because the person is not required to try effective treatments and there is no requirement to refer the person to a palliative care specialist.

• Bill C-384 requires “the medical practitioner to act in the manner indicated by the person and that the person may revoke their request at any time.”

This simply means that a person may change their mind at any time. This supposed safeguard is an illusion because the bill allows for an intended death after the person is deemed incompetent, as long as the person had requested an intended death while being competent.

• Bill C-384 requires “the medial practitioner to provide the coroner with a copy of the written confirmations of the diagnosis that were received from at least two medical practitioners.”

This is a common “after-the-fact” reporting system that exists in other jurisdictions where they have legalized an intended death. After-the-fact reporting is not a safeguard because the person has already died, it only offers protection for the medical practitioner.

• Bill C-384 defines medical practitioner as a duly qualified person by provincial law to practice medicine. The definition of medical practitioner is not limited to a physician.

Final comments:

• Society cannot legislate autonomy and choice in relation to acts that intentionally and directly cause death. No safeguard will ever protect vulnerable people from the subtle pressure to “choose” death.
Legalizing euthanasia and/or assisted suicide is always wrong because:
• It directly and intentionally threatens the lives of the most vulnerable members of society. The lives of people with disabilities and chronic conditions, people who live with depression and mental illness, and others are directly threatened by euthanasia and assisted suicide.
• It establishes euthanasia and assisted suicide as a treatment option for problems that are properly solved by effective and compassionate medical care.
• It changes the trust relationship between the medical practitioner and the patient.

Canadians need to tell their member of parliament to vote against Bill C-384 because it promotes a concept of choice and autonomy which is based on false principles and safeguards that are simply an illusion.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Fonteece released to half-way house - pending trial

Information Update:

The Canadian Press has reported that Peter Fonteece has been released on bail to a half-way house pending trial in the death of his wife Yolande.

The Canadian Press Article stated:
Peter Fonteece, 46, was released on a recognizance with $1,000 no-deposit bail after a court appearance Wednesday in this northwestern Ontario city.

Fonteece is required to live at Howard House, run by the John Howard Society, and abide by their rules and curfew. He must also report to police weekly and attend appointments with the Canadian Mental Health Association. Fonteece, who is scheduled to be back in provincial court on May 7, is charged with criminal negligence causing death and assisted suicide in the death of his wife, Yanisa Fonteece, 38.

The couple had been driving west when their vehicle broke down in Thunder Bay on Feb. 2, police said. It's believed they were unemployed and headed west, looking for work.

On Feb. 6, Fonteece called 911 and paramedics and police found his wife's body in their motel room.

Link to Canadian Press article:
http://www.standard-freeholder.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1525759

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Thousands of elderly suffering as abuse toll doubles in Ireland

The Irish Independent newspaper published an article that was written by their Health Correspondent Eilish O'Regan about the growing incidents of elder abuse in Ireland.

I have decided to blog on this issue because in Canada and many other nations, their is a growing recognition that elder abuse has become a terrible cultural problem.

The article stated:
THE number of reported incidents of elder abuse doubled last year -- and in most cases the culprit is a member of their own family, a damning new report reveals.

The Health Service Executive (HSE) last night confirmed it received 1,840 reports of alleged or suspected abuse of elderly last year, compared to 927 in 2007.

The report uncovered the hidden torment of many older people who are physically abused in some cases, frequently by the person that is closest to them.

However, the reported cases are just the tip of the iceberg. Experts believe between 12,000 to 20,000 older people are suffering mistreatment in the community.

What should be really concerning to people who read this article is that the article states:
In the majority of cases the culprit was a spouse, son, daughter or partner and two-thirds of victims were women.

The article does suggest that the increased incidence is partially due to an increase in reporting, nonetheless the societal growth of elder abuse must be taken more seriously. The article states:
The rise is partly due to the appointment of elder abuse officers by the HSE around the country and also a greater awareness of the issue.

Prof Des O'Neill, who is chair of the National Implementation Group on Elder Abuse and author of the Leas Cross report, last night said he welcomed the evidence that more of these cases are now being brought to light.

"It is encouraging and a national database is now in place giving more information," he added.

But he said the implementation group -- set up by the Department of Health to act as watchdog to progress safeguards for the elderly -- was still not getting enough support from banks, the Financial Regulator or the Department of Finance.

My involvement in end-of-life issues helps me to raise a red-flag of concern related to how we treat people who are more vulnerable in society.

For those who suggest that assisted suicide is the answer to end-of-life issues, just consider that rising incidence of elder abuse and the reality that death can become the ultimate elder abuse.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Husband declared fit for trial for alleged role in wife's suicide

The Waterloo Record newspaper reported on April 9, 2009 that Peter Fonteece was able to stand trial in the death of his wife Yanissa Fonteece.

The article stated:
A man from Waterloo, charged with assisting his wife's suicide in February, has been found fit to stand trial. A judge made the decision yesterday after a psychiatric assessment of Peter Fonteece, 46. The body of 38-year-old Yanisa Fonteece was discovered Feb. 6 in a Thunder Bay motel room after her husband made a 911 call. The couple were heading to Western Canada when their car broke down Feb. 2. Fonteece is also charged with criminal negligence causing death.

It is important to note that when the media first contacted the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, the media were attempting to build a story for changing the law based on this case.

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition cannot comment on the merits of the case until information becomes available.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Stephen Drake asks difficult questions about the Kaylee Wallace case.

Kaylee Wallace is an infant in Toronto who has Joubert Syndrome. Her parents have been told by the specialists at Sick Children's hospital in Toronto that Kaylee will die from her medical condition.

Jason Wallace and Crystal Vitelli, the parents of Kaylee, offered the heart of Kaylee for donation to Lillian O'Connor, a one month old child who requires a heart transplant.

There are questions about the ethics of offering a heart.

What happened is that on Tuesday morning, Kaylee was removed from the respirator, but didn't die.

In the meantime this has become a media circus about if one of the babies will die, will there be an organ donation, etc, etc.

Please read Stephen Drake's comments. It asks some very serious questions.
Link to the Stephen Drake's comments on the Not Dead Yet blog:
http://notdeadyetnewscommentary.blogspot.com/2009/04/kaylee-wallace-disturbing-coverage-and.html

Monday, April 6, 2009

New Mexico Bill makes gassing animals illegal

When debating the issues of euthanasia and assisted suicide, it is often suggested that we euthanise animals why not euthanise humans?

I could write a long comment on why humans and animals are not the same, but then I would rather write about the fact that Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico has signed into law a bill to prevent animal cruelty that outlaws the euthanasia technique of gassing animals to death.

The article in the Albuquerque newspaper stated:
It passed the legislature and the governor signed the bill into law on Monday. The law prohibits euthanasia of dogs and cats by gas chambers.

The bill closes a loophole in existing legislation, and would eliminate the use of gas chambers in all cities and municipalities.

At the same time the Final Exit Network has been travelling across the United States using Turkey bags and Helium (Exit Bag) to assist the suicides of humans.

I wonder why it is considered humane by the Final Exit Network to use helium and a plastic hood while it is inhumane to use gas to euthanise dogs and cats.

I guess we don't need to wonder why the Final Exit Network "Guides" need to allegedly hold down the hands of their suicide victim to stop them from removing the hood.

Link to the articles:
http://www.citizen-times.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200990330008

http://www.krqe.com/dpp/news/politics/politics_krqe_albuqueque_bill_makes_gassing_animals_illegal_200904061312