Posts tonen met het label euthanasia. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label euthanasia. Alle posts tonen

woensdag, november 20, 2013

Members of the Belgium Euthanasia Control and Evaluation Commission appear to be in a Conflict of Interest?

The following article was published on the blog of Alex Schadenberg on November 20, 2013. 

Dr. Sc. Tom Mortier, Leuven University College
Dr. Med. Georges Casteur, General Medical Practitioner, Ostend

Parts of this article were published by the Belgian Medical Newspaper (www.artsenkrant.com)

In October 2013, the leading euthanasia doctor in Belgium, Wim Distelmans, received international media attention for the second time. Under his “medical” guidance, he killed 44-year-old Nathan Verhelst, who was born as Nancy. Distelmans, who is an oncologist, said on the Belgian radio that his patient met “all” the conditions of the euthanasia law. Furthermore, Distelmans said that unbearable suffering under the Belgian euthanasia law can be both physical and psychological.

Distelmans gave Nathan Verhelst a lethal injection on September 30, 2013
In the case of Nathan Verhelst, euthanasia was done for reasons of psychological suffering. Distelmans said that it is not exceptional for mentally ill patients to be euthanized. When he was asked about the terms of the legislation, Distelmans replied laconically that a second opinion should be sought from two other doctors, and when the patient is not terminally ill, one doctor must be a psychiatrist. Furthermore, a month must pass between the written request for euthanasia and the lethal injection.

However, according to the Belgian euthanasia law, the opinions of the two other doctors are not binding; and the doctor who does the euthanasia can ignore a negative opinion and still give a patient the lethal injection. Basically, in Belgium, a person only needs to find a euthanasia doctor who is willing to kill! The euthanasia doctor only has to have two written reports in the medical record approving euthanasia of the patient and the doctor can ignore any negative reports.

It is striking to see that Distelmans, as the leading euthanasia doctor in Belgium, has been given so much freedom. Distelmans has become a Belgian media icon who continually propagates his ideology through various newspapers and magazines. His institutional background also has enabled him to be honoured as the “hero of the Belgian euthanasia law.” He has been the chairman of the Belgian Euthanasia Control and Evaluation Commission (Belgian Commission) for more than 10 years.

Furthermore, he has started his own ideological association (Leif) that is giving awards to other members of the Belgian Commission. For instance, the retired Senator Jacinta De Roeck, a pro-euthanasia activist, was recently honoured by Distelmans with a “lifetime achievement award,” which is ironic as already more than 8000 euthanasia cases have been registered in Belgium since 2002.

As the chairman of the Belgian Commission, Distelmans is “controlling” his euthanasia law, while continuing to administer lethal injections after “consulting” with his close colleagues. Therefore, we strongly question whether independent consultations, a legal requirement of the law, are actually occurring during these so-called medical consultations. Is it not a conflict of interest when Distelmans declares euthanasia cases performed by himself to the Belgian Commission when he is also the chairman and when the members of the Belgian Commission include pro-euthanasia activists like Jacinta De Roeck and Jacqueline Herremans?

Furthermore, there will never be a two-thirds majority to send a case to a judge because the members of the Belgian Commission and its chairman are in a conflict of interest!

It appears that Distelmans has become both the judge and the executioner.

If the euthanasia law in Belgium has taught us anything, it is that in Belgium the euthanasia doctors have been given all of the power in contrast to the patients who are given lethal injections!

Dr Tom Mortier is also a member of the Belgian group - Euthanasie Stop.

vrijdag, november 15, 2013

Belgian euthanasia promoter admits that there are problems with euthanasia in Belgium

This article was published by Alex Schadenberg on November 15, 2013

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC) Europe was launched on Wednesday November 13 with a press conference in Brussels Belgium at 2:30 pm at the European Parliament followed by a euthanasia debate in the evening between Dr. Jan Bernheim, an oncologist, medical researcher and biomedical consultant and Alex Schadenberg (myself), the executive director and International Chair of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition. Bernheim is a physician who lobbied for the legalization of euthanasia in Belgium.


The evening event, known as the 'Great Debate,' started with introductions by the sponsoring groups and then a short speech by Dr Kevin Fitzpatrick, the director of EPC Europe and a leader of Not Dead Yet UK. The evening continued with the debate and then there was a question and answer session with Dr Jan Bernheim and Professor Etienne Vermeersch (an author of the Belgian euthanasia law) with Carine Brochier (the European Institute of Bioethics) and myself.

Euthanasia debate in Brussels

Bernheim spoke first in the debate. He explained that euthanasia is necessary to eliminate suffering, and that euthanasia was already occurring in Belgium before it was legal and since euthanasia is legal it is now regulated. He stated that the number of euthanasia deaths did not increase after legalization.

Bernheim used data in his presentation that was limited to 2002 - 2007 statistics and he did not include any of the more recent data that uncovers abuses of the law.

Bernheim also explained that in Belgium, he was a pioneer in palliative care. He stated that:

Unlike the Dame Cicily Saunders who developed palliative care in the UK to prevent euthanasia, Bernheim developed palliative care in Belgium in order to legalize euthanasia.

During the debate I went through the data from the recent Belgian studies indicating that: 32% of the assisted deaths are done without request, that 47% of the assisted deaths are not being reported, and that nurses were euthanizing patients, even though the law specifically states that only doctors can do euthanasia.

I explained that the data proves that the assisted deaths that are done without request, the assisted deaths that are done by nurses and the unreported assisted deaths share a high co-relation with the same demographic group, that being people who are over the age of 80, who are incompetent to make decisions, who die in a hospital and usually have an unpredictable end-of-life trajectory. This is a vulnerable patient group at risk of having euthanasia imposed upon them. Sadly these people are also known as bed blockers.

I also spoke about the recent euthanasia cases in Belgium, including: the Belgian twins who died by euthanasia because they feared becoming blind, the woman with Anorexia Nervosa who died by euthanasia after her psychiatrist had sexual relations with her, the depressed woman who died by euthanasia, and the person who died by euthanasia after a botched sex change operation.

All of these euthanasia deaths were done for the reason of psychological suffering, a term which cannot be defined and is being done to an ever expanding group of people. Usually these people are not terminally ill nor physically suffering, who are being abandoned by a system that would rather kill them than provide them with excellent medical care and social support.

I stated that legalizing euthanasia is not safe and that the supposed "safeguards" are often ignored and do not work.

I also stated that people who do not want euthanasia are not protected by the law, but rather the law protects the doctors who euthanize their patients. There has never been an attempted prosecution for killing a person outside of the parameters of the Belgian euthanasia law.

We then went to the question and answer session.

Bernheim and Vermeersch insisted that the practise of euthanasia has improved since 2002, when euthanasia was legalized in Belgium and they also insisted that similar problems exist in nations where euthanasia is not legal.

Vermeersch, blaimed the Walloons, the french region of Belgium, for the problems with the euthanasia law, even though all of the studies that I referred to were from the Flanders Region of Belgium.

Vermeersch also suggested that there were not enough euthanasia deaths occurring because Catholic hospitals frowned on euthanasia. I stated that, sadly his comment was not correct since a 2011 Belgian study found that only 5% of the requests for euthanasia in Belgium are refused.

Finally Vermeersch explained that the euthanasia law was specifically designed to allow people with disabilities or chronic conditions to die by euthanasia. When Dr Kevin Fitzpatrick, the director of EPC Europe and a leader of Not Dead Yet UK asked him to clarify his statement, he said:

Just wait until you are paralysed.

As the questions from the audience became more intense, Bernheim then stated:

There are problems with the Belgian euthanasia law. 

He then stated that there is a study that may be published soon where the data shows other problems with the practise of euthanasia in Belgium.

Then Bernheim, once again, insisted that these same problems occur in nations where euthanasia is prohibited.

I stated that there are problems in Canada, but doctors do not have access to Barbituates to kill their patients, meaning that we are not comparing apples to apples.

I also stated that in Canada, if a complaint were filed about a doctor who intentionally kills a patient, that the doctor could be prosecuted with homicide, which is a very serious crime, whereas in Belgium where many euthanasia deaths are done outside of the law, that there has never been an attempted prosecution.

Carine Brochier thanked Bernheim for admitting that the Belgian euthanasia law is abused. She pointed out that the recent 10 year report on the practise of euthanasia and a recent book on the Belgian euthanasia law has received significant attention outside of Belgium but no attention in Belgium.

Bernheim and the euthanasia lobby ignore that euthanasia is the direct and intentional killing of a person. Abuses of the euthanasia law amount to intentional killings, acts that are defined as homicide or manslaughter in nearly every jurisdiction in the world.

It is nice that Bernheim admitted that there are problems with the practise of euthanasia in Belgium but that is cold comfort to people who are dead.

Laws that prohibit euthanasia and assisted suicide are designed to protect people.

The press conference in the afternoon was also a great success.

The event opened with comments from David Fieldsend, the manager of CARE for Europe, he was followed by Sari Essayah, a member of the European Parliament from Finland who also sponsored the event. I then followed Sari by explaining the how important it is that EPC - Europe is being launched to oppose the legalization of euthanasia in Europe and to push back where euthanasia has already become legal.

The feature of the press conference was Dr Kevin Fitzpatrick, the director of EPC Europe. Fitzpatrick explained how euthanasia was a form of discrimination for people with disabilities and other vulnerable people. He also spoke about how euthanasia is being falsely promoted as a form of personal autonomy.

Dr Kevin Fitzpatrick
Fitzpatrick made it very clear that euthanasia is not safe and that judgements that determine that a person's life is not worth living are particularly dangerous for people who have already been socially devalued in society.

Dr Fitzpatrick concluded,

‘EPC-Europe brings people from a wide variety of backgrounds together to oppose the legalisation of euthanasia and assisted suicide, promote the best care and support for vulnerable people and to help people to find meaning, purpose and hope in the face of suffering and despair. We invite others who share our concerns to join us and work alongside us.’ 

On November 14th I was interviewed by a German TV station.

I would like to thank the many people who organized the press conference and the "Great Debate" on November 13th in Brussels. Several people who attended the debate stated that they never hear about what is really happening with euthanasia in Belgium. Some of those who attended the "Great Debate" stated to me afterwards that they now understand why legalizing euthanasia is not safe. It was a great success and is an incredible beginning for EPC Europe.

donderdag, november 14, 2013

Euthanasia Prevention Coalition Europe launches to halt ‘growing threat’ of state-sanctioned euthanasia

This article was published by Alex Schadenberg on November 13, 2013

A new coalition is being launched in Brussels on Wednesday November 13, 2013 to combat the growing threat of euthanasia across Europe.


The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition Europe, (EPC-Europe) brings together organisations and individuals from across the continent to campaign against the erosion of laws that protect people from euthanasia.

This new campaign group will act as a powerful voice against attempts to change laws across Europe that protect people from euthanasia and assisted suicide.

Dr Kevin Fitzpatrick, OBE, Coordinator of EPC-Europe said:

‘The UK, France and Germany are currently considering legislation, but overwhelming evidence from jurisdictions where euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide is legal, such as Belgium and the Netherlands, demonstrates beyond doubt, how quickly and easily euthanasia is extended to others, especially disabled people and elderly people. High-profile cases here have provoked international outrage leading commentators to think of Belgium as the new world leader in exploiting euthanasia against those with disabilities and mental health issues for example.’

The group will highlight cases of euthanasia in Belgium including those of Mark and Eddy Verbessem, the 45-year-old deaf identical twins, who were euthanised by the Belgian state, after their eyesight began to fail; and the case of Nathan/Nancy Verhelst, whose life was ended in front of TV cameras, after a series of botched sex-change operations. His mother said she hated girls, found her child ‘so ugly’ at birth and did not mourn his death. And the case of Ann G, who had anorexia and who opted to have her life ended after being sexually abused by the psychiatrist who was supposed to be treating her for the life-threatening condition.

EPC - Press conference

Dr Fitzpatrick continued,

‘The lack of proper social care in Belgium as well as medical failures, mean non-terminally ill patients are left with no choice and suffer fatal consequences. Euthanasia has also begun in Belgium for organ donation, and for prisoners.’

EPC-Europe will also warn that Belgium is currently considering extending euthanasia to children. ‘We all know that euthanasia is already practised on children,’ said the head of the intensive care unit of Fabiola Hospital in Brussels.

In the Netherlands disabled new-born babies are euthanised under the Groningen Protocol, on grounds of ‘their perceived future suffering, or that of their parents’. This includes neonates with spina bifida.

As Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson, of the British House of Lords said:

‘If that had existed in the UK when I was born there is a possibility that I would not be alive now. I would never have been allowed to experience life and my daughter might never have been born.’

The group will highlight changing attitudes to disabled and vulnerable people, saying that those with physical and mental disabilities, elderly and poor people must be given the same protections as non-disabled, wealthier people.

In the Netherlands the number of deaths by euthanasia has increased by 64% between 2005 and 2010. In comparison, the Dutch population grew by less than two percent over the same period. Yet the Dutch are now discussing the extension of euthanasia to people with dementia despite huge concerns about proper consent.

Dr Fitzpatrick concluded,

‘EPC-Europe brings people from a wide variety of backgrounds together to oppose the legalisation of euthanasia and assisted suicide, promote the best care and support for vulnerable people and to help people to find meaning, purpose and hope in the face of suffering and despair. We invite others who share our concerns to join us and work alongside us.’

Aims of EPC-Europe

1.We oppose the legalisation of euthanasia and assisted suicide and will work to repeal existing laws allowing it
2.We promote the best care and support for vulnerable people who are sick, elderly, or disabled
3.We affirm life through helping people to find meaning, purpose and hope in the face of suffering and despair.

donderdag, november 07, 2013

Belgium, where death becomes the norm, living the exception



A documentary about ten years of legal euthanasia is a touchstone for radically different approaches to suffering.





Recently I received an invitation to fly to Calgary in mid-November to attend the North American première of a film called End Credits at the Marda Loop Justice Film Festival. I was asked to lead a post-screening conversation with the audience and was given access to a copy of the film with English subtitles, which I viewed once. My access has since been blocked and my invitation to attend the festival withdrawn. The scenes from the film, which I describe below, are accurate to the best of my recollection.


End Credits is directed by Alexander Decommere and written by Marc Cosyns. It’s a documentary on the practice of euthanasia in Belgium 10 years after it was legalized in 2002. It follows the dying and death of two people, whom the film makers describe as follows: “Adelin, 83, and Eva, 34, two very different people, who are at the dawn of the end of their lives, ask for help with and care for a decent passing away.”

The most striking commonality shared by the old man, Adelin, and the young woman, Eva, is that they are profoundly lonely.

We first meet Adelin in the nursing home where he lives. He is physically fragile and cognitively impaired. At one point, he describes his life as a “dead life” — a powerful phrase that must be heard and which should raise questions of how to improve his situation. It brings to mind lung specialist, Dr Donald Boudreau’s words in speaking about euthanasia: “These euthanologists — if they have their way — will create a moral ecosystem where we will all be traversing through a sort of ‘living death’. Life is the qualifier. Death is the unshakable and primary reality.” At a certain point, death becomes the norm or basic presumption, living the exception.

Adelin has given his consent to euthanasia in an advance directive executed when he was competent. His physician is trying to determine whether Adelin still wants to go ahead with the procedure. Adelin’s nephew, a middle-aged man, is sitting beside his bed. He urges the physician to administer a lethal injection, because, he says, his uncle is no longer mentally competent, so can’t validly change his mind about euthanasia. The physician continues to try to clarify with the old man whether he wants euthanasia.

Suddenly, Adelin has a burst of energy and seeming lucidity, and shouts, “You want to kill me,” and is clearly horrified by the thought. He is not euthanized and some time later dies a natural death.

Eva is a young Belgian woman, who suffers from mental illness (probably severe depression), who wants euthanasia and, subsequently, to donate her organs. Medical journal articles report organs being taken from euthanized people in Belgium for transplant. In at least one of these cases, a woman donor was mentally ill, but not physically ill.

However, Eva is refused permission to donate by the relevant authority, but she still chooses to go ahead with euthanasia.

We see shots of Eva with her beautiful dog and learn that her brother is in the house, but not with her when she dies, which says so much. Eva says to the physician, “Let’s get on with this.” Wearing sweat pants and a jersey, she lies down on her living room couch and rolls up her sleeve, as though she is going to have her blood pressure taken.

Watching the physician euthanizing her is a chilling experience: The lack of any human warmth. The lack of any sense of the momentousness of what is being done — one human being, and a physician at that, intentionally killing another human being who is his patient. The mundaneness of it all, which is reinforced by the scenes of the physician sitting at Eva’s kitchen table, after he has killed her, routinely filling out the necessary reporting forms.

I was puzzled by what stance on euthanasia the film makers were taking, but my overall impression was it was probably one of neutrality and, I thought, the film might function as a very powerful cri de coeur against euthanasia.

So I tried, although unsuccessfully as the film makers ignored my emails, to get permission to show the film to others, in particular, the students in my Medical Law class. I recommended to the Quebec National Assembly committee holding hearings on legalizing euthanasia in Quebec that they try to see the film to understand why they should reject euthanasia and Bill 52.

To my absolute astonishment and distress, I subsequently learned from Belgian colleagues that the film is intended to promote euthanasia and was funded by “Recht op Waardig Sterven,” a pro-euthanasia movement comparable to “The right to die with dignity” movements in Canada and that its writer, Dr Marc Cosyns, is a strong supporter and practitioner of euthanasia in Belgium. How could I have been so confused?

The explanation is the different ways in which pro- and anti-euthanasia adherents would view the two deaths featured in this film.

We see Adelin gradually deteriorating and dying over a period of time. This is difficult to watch, but he is empathetically and compassionately attended by those caring for him, until he dies naturally. They manifest the virtue of patience in their “deathwatch” of Adelin. We all want his dying to be over, but that is very different from making it be over with a lethal injection. I see his human dignity as being respected and his death as a “good death.” He, himself, and not someone else, completes his life cycle and the mystery of life and death is not violated.

Pro-euthanasia advocates would regard Adelin’s dying trajectory as an unacceptable loss of autonomy and control on his part. They would see him as having lost his dignity and his state as making him less of a person or even a non-person — an incomplete, diminished, or even faulty, decaying, tarnished human being — who should be put out of his undignified state through euthanasia.

I saw the physician’s relationship with Eva as cold, clinical and overly rational (which can be a characteristic of a failure of good ethical judgment), and her death as horrifying and unethical. Pro-euthanasia advocates would see it as respecting her right to autonomy and, thus, her dignity, and putting her out of her mental misery.

End Credits provides an opportunity to understand some of the ways in which people who are pro-euthanasia and those who are anti-euthanasia radically differ in how they view both dying and death, and what euthanasia involves. And those differences reflect profound differences in what we believe it means to be human and what respect for both individual human life and upholding the value of human life, in general, in our society requires that we not do.

Margaret Somerville is the Samuel Gale Professor of Law and director of the McGill Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law and is a leader in the discussion of ethical questions in medicine.

vrijdag, november 01, 2013

Belgium Leaps Off Euthanasia Moral Cliff

"Belgium Leaps Off Euthanasia Moral Cliff" was written by Wesley J. Smith and published on www.nationalreview.com on October 31, 2013.

By Wesley J. Smith - October 31, 2013

We have discussed the Belgian legislation that would open euthanasia to children more than once here at Human Exceptionalism. Now, the mainstream media is catching up. From the Washington Post story.

Belgium, where euthanasia is now legal for people over the age of 18, the government is considering extending it to children — something that no other country has done. The same bill would offer the right to die to adults with early dementia. 

Note that the law’s supposed legal constraints are violated with impunity:

Dr. Gerlant van Berlaer, a pediatric oncologist at the Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussels hospital, says the changes would legalize what is already happening informally. He said cases of euthanasia in children are rare and estimates about 10 to 100 cases in Belgium every year might qualify.

“Might qualify?” As a famous U.S. politician recently said, “What difference does it make?” If a case doesn’t qualify, they will kill anyway and then use their lawbreaking as the justification to further expand the law–as has been the Dutch model.

The proposal would also allow the euthanasia of dementia patients who asked to be killed before losing capacity–even if they were then happy. Talk about dictatorship of the past!

And now, we learn that Belgian euthanasia deaths have gone up 25% in one year–to 2% of all deaths. From the La Nuova Bossola story (Google translation)

Twenty-five percent.From time grew from 2011 to 2012…To make known is the Federal Commission for monitoring and evaluation of euthanasia, which broke the news that 1,432 people have asked to be killed or have been helped to take his own life in 2012, against 1,133 in 2011. This is 2% of all deaths in the country.

That would amount to about 50,000 annual U.S. medicalized killings if we had the same rate.

Add in the organ harvesting/euthanasia killings, euthanasia for elderly couples, mentally ill, and sexually exploited despairing people, and we see that Belgium has abandoned any belief in the sanctity/equality of human life.

This is the horrific logic of euthanasia: Once killing is accepted as an answer to human difficulty and suffering, the power of sheer logic dictates that there is no bottom.

What distinguishes Belgium is the frightening enthusiasm with which the Belgian people and doctors have embraced the killing agenda. They have leaped off a vertical moral cliff with a smile on their faces.

dinsdag, oktober 29, 2013

Irene Ogrizek on Euthanasia: Putting the Elderly at Risk

Legalisation contaminates the caring ethic and compromises our ability to trust doctors. 




The current euthanasia debate in Quebec frightens me. As a woman of a certain age, I fear I am heading into a future where I may lose meaningful control of my life. Whether I live or die may hinge on the kindness of individuals unknown to me, perhaps nurses or doctors, who will be put in the position of determining my worth.

If I’m lucky and live past my retirement, evidence of all the things I’ve accomplished in my career will be gone. How will I look as a 75 year-old to myself and others? How will I be judged?

When it comes to euthanasia, the slippery slope aspect of it keeps being swept under the carpet. For me, it is the single most compelling reason not to go forward and here’s why: I have seen the slippery slope played out in the care my mother receives at her nursing home.

First I’d like to say that I chose this nursing home carefully; the staff to resident ratio was good and the building was clean and bright. It is located in a large Canadian city and is part of a government network of homes. My mother’s pension plan covers her monthly bill, and so I use leftover money to pay for extras, like paid companions, to visit her. She has been disabled by a stroke and needs help wheeling herself around.
Despite having helpers, my mother has gone through three periods of unauthorized medicating. I believe she was given medications that made her drowsy and docile and that were not included on her chart. Because of her fragile health, and the fact that she tires naturally, I had some difficulty, at least initially, detecting the problem.

The first time I noticed something was awry, it took a few visits to make sure I wasn’t catching my mother during an unstable phase in her health. When I saw her drowsiness was ongoing, however, I brought it up with a nurse, who said my mother was simply tired. I asked to see her chart anyway, just in case her medications had been changed and they’d forgotten to tell me.

The nurse promised to leave a note for the doctor, reporting my mother’s lethargy and asking him to examine her. I didn’t hear back from anyone, but on my next visit, my mother was back to her old self, sharp as a tack and telling me I needed to do a better job combing my hair before I left the house. It was a good sign and when I asked about the doctor’s examination, I was told it had been conducted and that there were no new developments. I let the matter go, but of course wondered.

The next time it happened, the drowsiness was far more pronounced. Using my phone, I took videos of my mother having lunch and then supper every day for several days. At lunch she was her usual chipper self; at supper she was unconscious. When I presented my evidence to the head nurse, he didn’t even try to deny it. He said he would take care of it internally – under his authority, that is – and that I could trust him when he said it would stop. I did trust him and it did stop. However, he resigned a few months later.

That was a year ago and I have just come off the third round of this same problem. Starting a few weeks ago, I kept finding my mother unaccountably drowsy, asked for a doctor to examine her and, within days, she had miraculously recovered. Earlier in the month, her eyes had been glassy and unfocused and she could barely communicate. Fearing the worst, I had called her partner, who is now living near his children, to come and say goodbye.

Now, I am sympathetic to nursing and personal support care staff. I took care of my mother for some time before she went into a home and so have a realistic idea of the energy it takes to care for her properly. There’s no doubt about it: it’s hard work.

However, what is important, for the purposes of this discussion, is the phenomenon of rogue healthcare workers. I believe this last bout of over-medicating came about because there is probably one newly-placed employee, on the morning shift, who wants to decrease his (or her) workload and this is how he is doing it. The problem is that the oversight at the home is adequate: it has a good reputation deservedly. It’s just that elderly residents like my mother are expected to be poorly at times. Drugging her, under these circumstances, is easy.

I am worried about legalizing euthanasia because the chances are excellent that similar patterns will arise but with graver circumstances. Think of administrators being to urged to open beds in hospitals or nursing homes. Imagine they are being asked to clear out the most “expensive” patients. They would not have to euthanize, necessarily. They could present an elderly patient in a drugged state and convince a family that a catastrophic neurological event had happened. They could also claim a sedated patient was simply withdrawing from life. Having just seen my mother in this condition, without any medications on her chart to explain it, I know it could happen. It’s sad, but not all families are engaged enough to question an institution’s findings.

The elderly are the most vulnerable to the unethical use of “voluntary” euthanasia. They have financial and material wealth younger relatives may covet, and they are more likely to be nudged into this kind of “beyond hope” scenario. A little Benadryl or Dilaudid is all it would take.

These problems will touch the rest of us. I keep hearing over and over again, from supporters of euthanasia, how “It’s my life; I have a right to take it if I want.” It’s true people have a right to commit suicide. However, what I object to is the involvement of healthcare staff. As someone who has seen abuse in the system, I do not want a doctor who believes in euthanasia. I do not want this because if I am given a bad diagnosis, he or she may push me toward it and away from a more expensive life-saving option. This could be accomplished by exaggerating the difficulties facing me; I could be told I’m going to suffer a protracted and painful death.
And there are more complications.

Given the protectionism I’ve seen among most (although not all) doctors, I don’t think it likely Quebecers will be told which doctors are practicing euthanasia. I suspect the doctors who choose to do it will not, perhaps for reasons of safety, be putting their names out in the public sphere. Despite the fact that users of the system have a right to know, I doubt we will.

So for all the cries of “It’s my life; I can do what I want with it,” I say this: involving a doctor, a doctor in a pool of doctors we all use, contaminates and compromises their decision-making and contaminates and compromises our ability to trust them. In a sense, by insisting on your rights to such an individualistic extent, you are peeing in our pool.

Another argument I keep hearing is this: why would you insist on making someone suffer through unimaginable pain? How can you truly know what another person is feeling? Here’s my answer: I believe my mother was deliberately under-treated by a physician who tried to make a life and death decision for her. Perhaps it’s because he heard my mother had been athletic and decided she should not live out her years in a wheelchair. I suspect important procedures had been postponed — too often — because he had prioritized younger patients and de-prioritized her. Ironically, those postponements are what led to her poor condition in the end.

And that’s the problem. Assumptions were made in my mother’s case too. Healthcare workers saw her future and decided it would be “cruel” to let her live. This was said to me even after my mother had been told of her prognosis, accepted her fate and told me she wanted to go on. However, had she not become conscious when she did, and insisted on that right, I have no doubt the infection she was suffering from would have been allowed to take its course.

I’ve got a phrase for this: I call it euthanasia by attrition. Where my mother was concerned, it was a back-room decision that could not have been undone. In my view, the suffering of a small percentage of patients, at the end of their lives, is not worth the taking of another life arbitrarily. Even if my mother is sick and elderly, she still has rights, including the right to go on living.

Here’s my final argument. Every time my mother has been drugged, I myself was going through a down period, a period, in other words, when my energy was flagging and I scheduled my visits in the evenings and made them quick. I am the sole caregiver for my mother and after years of taking care of her, there are just times when I need to go easy on myself.

It’s been at those times that the medicating started. So if this pattern of events is anything to go by, a heightened vigilance is what is needed for me to prevent yet another episode. However, this is easier said than done.

Being vigilant takes time and energy and is not always possible, for individuals like myself and institutions like hospitals. It’s this kind of naive faith – that we have the time, energy and resources to oversee euthanasia – that is an illusion. It’s this same naive faith – that the paperwork controlling euthanasia will do its job – that is equally illusory. The controls will slip. Crack open a history book is what I want to say when I hear euthanasia supporters accusing me of being a holy-roller and going on about their rights.
That’s right, a history book. Our province’s future, when it comes to euthanasia, is in one.

Irene Ogrizek teaches English literature at the CEGEP level in Montreal, Quebec. This article has been republished by MercatorNet with permission from her blog

dinsdag, september 17, 2013

"Dying-with-dignity laws can hit a slippery slope" by Charlie Fidelman

"Dying-with-dignity laws can hit a slippery slope" was published by Charlie Fidelman, Gazette Health Reporter, in the Montreal Gazette on September 17, 2013.

Dying-with-dignity laws can hit a slippery slope
Tom Mortier got a shocking email last year that his mother, Godelieva De Troyer, who had been suffering with depression, had died a day earlier by lethal injection. This photo was taken on April 11, 2010, almost two years before her euthanasia.

MONTREAL — Belgian professor Tom Mortier got a shocking message at work last year informing him that his 64-year-old mother, who had been struggling with depression, received a lethal injection a day earlier.

Since his mother’s death, Mortier, who lectures on chemistry at the University College Leuven, has questioned and criticized Belgian law allowing euthanasia.

“These kind of legislations are taking the ethics out of the medical practice,” Mortier said in a telephone interview from his home Tuesday as Quebec launched parliamentary hearings on Bill 52, the controversial right-to-die legislation aimed at allowing doctors to help some terminally ill patients end their lives.

While several medical groups told parliament on Tuesday they support legislation to legalize euthanasia, Mortier warned Quebec that dying-with-dignity laws represent a slippery slope.

“It will only create new problems. They don’t see how it’s going to evolve,” Mortier said.

When Belgium adopted euthanasia in 2002, a year after Holland, the practice was aimed at patients with incurrable diseases and unbearable suffering.

“It was meant for very restrictive situations and rare circumstances, but the numbers have been rising,” Mortier said, and the practice has now gained wide acceptance.

Dr. Sarah Van Laer, who has euthanized 28 patients, has criticized the growing practice as “turbo-euthanasia.”

In June, the case of identical, deaf, 43-year-old Belgian twins Marc and Eddy Verbessem reverberated worldwide when the pair chose to die after discovering they had a genetic anomaly that would lead to their blindness. The case was striking because they were young and not terminally ill.

Mortier, who paid the issue little attention until confronted by his own mother’s death, said that nothing was written about euthanasia in her medical report.

Godelieva De Troyer died on April 19, 2012. She was suffering from chronic depression after a long-term relationship with her boyfriend ended. The death was carried out on the recommendation of a single psychiatrist.

“I spoke to the doctor who euthanized my mother and he said he was absolutely certain she didn’t want to live anymore,” Mortier said. “How could he be so sure?”

Mortier warned that Quebec’s proposed legislation would create a new class of physician — one who will have the power to determine the criteria for death. Paraphrasing the declaration from the World Medical Association, which opposes euthanasia, Mortier said: “Doctors should be taking care of people, not killing them.”

Quebec is not Belgium, said Dr. Yves Robert of the Quebec College of Physicians.

“This case would not have been allowed in Quebec under Bill 52,” Robert said of Mortier’s mother. “No stakeholders want this.”

The proposed law specifies three conditions: there must be an incurable disease, imminent death and unbearable suffering — which rules out depression, Robert said.

“Under these medical criteria, this woman would not have had access to medical help to die in Quebec,” he added.

Quebec did look to countries like Holland and Belgium to learn from their weaknesses; the problem in Europe is the scope of the law, Robert said, referring to cases where patients got life-ending drugs without their consent.

Quebec’s legislation excludes patients who are declared “inapt”, for example, those with dementia, and who cannot consent for themselves, Robert said, and the government will have to address that in the future because the bill does not cover all cases.

When Quebec first began debating the issue four years ago, more than 80 per cent of the province’s medical specialists surveyed said they had already seen euthanasia practised, and 48 per cent said that palliative sedation “can be likened to a form of euthanasia.”

But a law would provide tools — a framework and controls for end-of-life care, Robert said: “Without one, we’re exposed to clandestine activities with the complicity of everyone — and no way to intervene against that. That’s the benefit of such a law and why the College was in favour of this bill.”

However, opponents call attention to a 2011 study published in Current Oncology by University of Ottawa palliative care physician José Pereira, who says that safeguards protecting patients from abuse are an illusion.

A key highlight of Quebec’s proposed law, Robert said, is a vigilante-type government committee that would be responsible for verifying and overseeing all issues surrounding end-of-life care under Bill 52.

“Nothing is sure 100 per cent,” Robert said. “But I think there are enough safeguards to protect the public.”

Also, Quebec will have to invest in palliative support as part of the spectrum of end-of-life care, which in some cases will include the possibility of medical help to die.

“We said that to the MPs this morning, ‘Yes, there will be a need for investment,’ ” to improve services all across the province for a population that is aging, Robert said.

Claims that euthanasia will replace palliative care is “misinformation,” Robert said.

According to a survey this week conducted for the Quebec Medical Association, two-thirds of the province’s physicians say they agree that medical aid represents appropriate end-of-life care.

But not everyone agrees. Paul Saba, of the Coalition of Physicians for Social Justice, said that informed consent is not always respected in countries where euthanasia is legal.

Only 20 per cent of Quebec patients have access to palliative care in hospital. “Can they make a clear and informed consent when facing inadequate health care and risk suffering because they’re lacking homecare and medical services?”

Quebec is promoting euthanasia as a cheap alternative to palliative care, Saba said. The cost of dying is about $13 for an injection with a lethal cocktail of drugs, while the Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association pegged the cost of a patient dying in a hospice at $439 a day and $800 to $1,000 a day in hospital.

On average, it costs $36,000 to die in a chronic care facility, the association said.

The hearings continue this week in Quebec City.

cfidelman@montrealgazette.com

vrijdag, juni 14, 2013

"Disclosure Rules Leave Some Relatives in the Dark" by Naftali Bendavid

"Disclosure Rules Leave Some Relatives in the Dark" was published by Naftali Bendavid in The Wall Street Journal on June 14, 2013.

BRUSSELS — Tom Mortier received a message at work last year saying his 64-year-old mother had died the day before, and he quickly found out she'd been euthanized.

Mr. Mortier, who teaches college chemistry, was shocked. Though estranged from his mother, he knew she was depressed and had spoken of euthanasia. But he had no idea this could happen, he said, especially since she wasn't physically ill, and her children weren't informed. "This is irreversible," he said. "One day my mother is dead."

In the past 10 years since the country legalized the practice, more than 5,530 Belgians have signed up for euthanasia, according to government records. By most accounts, those who carry it out are surrounded by supportive family and friends. But however they occur, most cases have a searing effect on more than just the patient.

Five years ago, in a more typical case, a well-known Belgian writer Hugo Claus decided to be euthanized at age 78 while suffering from Alzheimer's. "He wanted to remain master of his life and also of his death," said his wife, Veerle Claus.

As the time approached, Mr. Claus's best friend came to stay with the couple to spend some final days visiting restaurants, talking, and laughing. Then on March 19, 2008, they took a cab to the hospital. "You leave in the morning with your husband and you talk normally," she recalled. "You know it's a one-way drive."

The Clauses drank champagne in the hospital room and shared a last forbidden cigarette. "Now it's time," Mr. Claus said. As he lay down, Ms. Claus sang a sentimental song, "Un Jour Tu Verras," about lovers who will reunite one day. Mr. Claus joined in until the injection took effect. "He died singing," Ms. Claus said. "You can't dream of a better death."

But Mr. Mortier remains angry about the fate of his mother, Godelieva De Troyer. She was depressed and emotionally difficult her whole life, he said, and in January last year, told him by email she'd asked for euthanasia. Mr. Mortier was used to his mother's emotionalism, and said doctors he knew insisted she wasn't a candidate for euthanasia.

They were wrong. Belgian law reserves euthanasia for patients with unbearable suffering and incurable conditions. But the suffering need not be physical, and the condition need not be fatal. The law also doesn't require the patient to notify the family.

In the end, in April that year, Mr. Mortier received an email from his wife saying to call a hospital because his mother was dead. Still stunned, he learned at the mortuary he was responsible for moving her body to an anatomy lab, since his mother had donated her body to science. He later received a final letter from his mother, confirming she was being euthanized and explaining how to retrieve her house key.

The doctors, including her primary physician who declined to comment, told Mr. Mortier his mother's desire to die was unequivocal and that she refused entreaties to contact him. Mr. Mortier says the law just gives doctors too much power determining the criteria for death. "What the doctor does is like a god," he said. "He decides if the life is worth living or not."

Write to Naftali.Bendavid at naftali.bendavid@wsj.com