South Australian Voluntary Euthanasia Society
The following is from the SAVES Newsletter, The VE Bulletin, Vol 16 No 2, July 99
SA's Voluntary Euthanasia Bill
The Social Development Committee has finished taking
oral evidence and is expected to complete its report ready
for tabling in Parliament by the end of July.
The following are extracts from the Media Release, "A
Peaceful Death", issued on 16 April by Sandra Kanck
MLC, Deputy Parliamentary Leader of the Australian
Democrats. (Sandra is also a member of the Social
Development Committee):
"Reported media comments of the Premier show he has
missed the point on voluntary euthanasia and palliative
care according to the Australian Democrats. The Party's
Health Spokesperson, Sandra Kanck, says it is unfortunate
Mr Olsen imagines that palliative care replaces the need
for people gripped by terminal illness to control their own
destiny. It is not an either/or situation: palliative care and
voluntary euthanasia are not mutually exclusive. ...
There are some conditions where the best palliative care
available is not able to relieve pain or provide the dignity
a suffering patient is seeking. ...
"Now, in a backward move, the South Australian Government is to investigate whether or not a doctor who
truthfully answers the questions of dying patients is
breaking the law. If our laws are such that it is an
offence to simply tell a patient which drugs will allow a
peaceful death then the law is unjust and should be
changed. We should heed the words of Nelson Mandela:
"To break an unjust law is a moral imperative, not to
break an unjust law is to collaborate in that law."
"If our politicians - our lawmakers - are not prepared to
remove an unjust law and to make laws that will allow for
voluntary euthanasia they should step aside for those who
do have the courage to enact the laws our society needs."
The following is from the SAVES Newsletter, The VE Bulletin, Vol 16 No 1, March 99
SAVES appears before the
Social Development Committee
The Social Development Committee is currently collecting
oral evidence regarding South Australia's Voluntary
Euthanasia Bill originally introduced by Anne Levy in
1996. Given the sheer volume of evidence, the number
of witnesses and the pressure of other parliamentary
responsibilities, the Committee's report is unlikely to be
ready for consideration by Parliament before about
September 1999. SAVES President Mary Gallnor and
Vice President Eric Gargett represented SAVES before the
Committee on 13 November 1998. Dr Gargett opened the
session with the following prepared statement:
- Our case has been set out fully in our written
submission and accompanying documents. We are
grateful for this opportunity to draw attention to key
aspects and comment on opposing views.
- "Voluntary euthanasia" refers to the termination of
life, or the hastening of death, by a doctor, at the
informed request of a patient whose quality of life has
fallen irreversibly below an acceptable level. It is an act
of medical judgement, performed out of compassion,
respecting the autonomy of both patient and doctor.
- There is a strong moral case for voluntary euthanasia:
- it respects the right of individuals to make decisions
about their own lives;
- it upholds human dignity, respecting life in terms of its
quality; and
- it shows compassion by offering final relief from
pointless suffering.
Dr John Fleming has argued that "compassion would
rob us of our rights", but in fact it is compassion - the
capacity to respond to the suffering of others in a way that
is meaningful to them - which ensures that our rights will
be respected.
- Surveys have shown that both requested and
unrequested (i.e., non-voluntary) euthanasia are not
uncommon in medical practice and that possibly a
majority of doctors are sympathetic to the concept. While
this is clear evidence of a felt need among patients and
their doctors, any action taken is covert and subject to no
guiding principles. Voluntary and non-voluntary
euthanasia are conflated by some opponents who speak
only of "euthanasia" - an example of loaded language in
the debate; another is reference to "killing". We do not
support non-voluntary euthanasia and we expect its
incidence to be reduced when voluntary euthanasia
becomes legal.
- Since voluntary euthanasia is morally sound, meets a
felt human need and has majority community, and
significant medical, support it should be encompassed in
law. As it is morally wrong to allow people to die in
unwanted suffering, and to treat as criminals doctors who
provide the relief they ask for, it cannot be politically
right to perpetuate the harm resulting from unmet need
and unregulated practice. The prohibition on voluntary
euthanasia should be replaced by legislation that ensures
careful regulation and public scrutiny
- Opposition to voluntary euthanasia comes most
strongly from church leaders. Yet a survey of
churchgoers found that this is not supported by most of
them, while the major public opinion survey in Australia
has shown that some 75% of people, including those
claiming affiliation to the mainstream churches, consider
that voluntary euthanasia should be allowed. Despite
much Christian support for voluntary euthanasia,
opposition by church hierarchies remains a major
obstacle, although in recent years it has been expressed in
secular terms.
- A voluntary euthanasia law has to strike a balance
between imposing too many controls and too few. The
issue is one of trust that doctors who participate will
exercise sound medical judgement in the interests of their
patients. This is no more or less than we expect of them
now, when our lives are in their hands.
- SAVES has examined proposed and actual voluntary
euthanasia legislation over many years and considers that
the Voluntary Euthanasia Bill 1996 is workable and can
achieve its aims. However, the addition of a clause
prohibiting publication without consent of the names of
doctors, or locations, involved in the practice of voluntary
euthanasia should be considered.
- We assume that once legislation is in place, the
Medical Association will issue guidelines, provide advice
and training where required, and monitor its
implementation as will the Medical Board. SAVES has
published a set of guidelines for discussion.
- There remain several misconceptions. In particular:
(a) Voluntary euthanasia contravenes an internationally
recognised inalienable right to life.
This is devoid of substance. If I have a right to life that
I cannot be deprived of, nor transfer to anyone else, it
follows that my life can be no one's property but my own.
So I am entitled to make decisions about it, even to end
it and ask someone to help me do so, provided that I do
not harm others. We reject the implied concept of a life
devoid of human quality that must be preserved.
Voluntary euthanasia does not deprive anyone of a life
that holds any value for them.
(b) Palliative care provides the answer.
Advocates of voluntary euthanasia strongly support
palliative care, maintaining that requesting patients must
be informed of palliative options and these must be readily
available. Legalisation of voluntary euthanasia in the
Northern Territory, and in the State of Oregon, was
followed by the upgrading of palliative care facilities. In
the Netherlands, with a similar population to ours, a high
standard of palliative care is provided and the service is
freely available in hospitals, (where there are 60,000
palliative care beds), or at home.
But palliative care cannot relieve all suffering, unless by
"terminal sedation", or "pharmacological oblivion" -
rendering the patient unconscious and ceasing
life-prolonging measures, until the patient dies. This is
"slow euthanasia", a subterfuge that relieves the
consciences of some doctors, meets the requirements of
the law, can only apply in certain cases, and would not be
regarded by most patients, or those who love them, as a
good way to die. This apart, we must accept as fact that
there are people who die lingering, distressful deaths.
They are hard cases, but hard cases do not make bad law
if there are enough of them. How many must suffer
needlessly before we have the courage to act?
(c) The Consent to Medical Treatment and Palliative
Care Act 1995 has made voluntary euthanasia
unnecessary.
In fact, although the Act was an important advance, it
unwittingly created two classes of patient. There are
those who can be helped to die, because they are
receiving life-preserving treatment which can be
discontinued, or treatment for pain relief which can be
increased - then there are all the others. This should not
be glossed over as a "grey area", or excused as "double
effect", but acknowledged as a "double standard".
(d) All societies disallow the intentional taking of human
life, and voluntary euthanasia should be no exception.
In fact all societies make rules permitting and regulating
intentional killing - and this is of people who have not
even requested it, e.g., in war, police action, self-defence,
and in some cases, capital punishment. It is said that the
victims are not innocent people - they have forfeited their
(supposedly inalienable) right to life. Yet requested
medical intervention to end a patient's suffering is
regarded as conflicting with society's respect for life. Is
the requesting patient not an innocent person, but "guilty"
of being hopelessly ill?
(e) A voluntary euthanasia law will be abused and/or
descend on a "slippery slope" with undesirable
consequences.
This is speculation at best and scaremongering at worst.
Experience has provided no support for this:
- In The Netherlands, official reports and scientifically
conducted surveys have shown that voluntary euthanasia
is administered responsibly, benefiting 2.6% of those who
die. As confidence in the system has grown, under-
reporting has decreased. Community support remains
high and the government is now proposing legalisation.
Unfortunately, the picture has been distorted by massaging
the statistics. This is examined in a SAVES' leaflet,
"Honesty the First Victim". Dutch people trust their
doctors and we should do the same and not treat them as
potential miscreants.
By contrast, of those who die in Australia, requested
euthanasia is administered to 1.8%, but unrequested
euthanasia to 3.5%, five times higher than in the
Netherlands, probably because our law prevents doctors
and patients discussing the option. Withholding or
withdrawing life-prolonging treatment and the
administration of doses likely to hasten death are also
significantly higher here. We do not say that the law
should be changed because doctors bend or break it.
They are making sound medical judgements in the
interests of their patients and the law should be changed
to respond to a demonstrated need and to institute
control.
- Legalisation in the Northern Territory resulted in four
assisted deaths which no one could reasonably argue were
unwarranted. The Act was not over-ridden because it
failed, but because it achieved an objective that others
found unacceptable.
- In November 1997, medically assisted suicide was
legalised in Oregon State, where there are about 20,000
deaths a year. In the next eleven months there were 350
enquiries, 51 requests from qualified patients, 10
prescriptions issued, and just 8 assisted deaths.
- (f)The assertion that "intention" is the key to moral
judgement when life is terminated, or death is hastened,
is a major red herring.
Moral responsibility does not rest solely with intention,
but also with foresight. If the consequence of my action
was foreseeable, I cannot disclaim responsibility merely
on the grounds that death was unintended. Nor is
intention necessarily single minded - there can be double
intention as well as so-called double effect. Intention in
the mind of the doctor provides no basis for public policy.
An example of the unsuitability of intention as a moral
arbiter is provided by the case of Tony Bland, 17 years
old, crushed in a crowd at a football match in Britain.
His brain was irreversibly damaged and dissolved to fluid
during three years in a coma. He was otherwise in good
condition and could be kept alive indefinitely by artificial
feeding and evacuation of his wastes, but he was no
longer a functioning being. Legal action had to be taken
as far as the House of Lords to obtain permission to cease
treatment for the express purpose of ending his life. If
intention had been the criterion, he would be alive today,
but he would still have no life.
- In conclusion, voluntary euthanasia is based on
sound moral principles and meets a genuine human need.
The present law, on the other hand, is unworkable and
causes harm.
|
|