First, full disclosure: I am an unpaid member of the steering group for a campaign called Our Duty of Care (ODOC), [1] a branch of Care Not Killing for healthcare professionals, which opposes physician-assisted suicide (PAS) and euthanasia. Please don’t let this prevent you from hearing me out; as you’ll discover, my involvement in this debate comes from fresh and powerful experience – I volunteer because I passionately believe in this cause.
May I begin by disentangling a little terminology. ‘Assisted dying’ is a euphemism encompassing (and, I believe, employed to mask) the practices of PAS and euthanasia – the former describes the prescribing and dispensing of a lethal cocktail for a patient to self-administer; the latter describes the prescribing and administering by the doctor of an injection intended to kill. Does the Hippocratic Oath ring any bells?
It is worth noting that encouraging or assisting another’s suicide remains a criminal offence. [2] Proponents of ‘assisted dying’, such as Dignity in Dying (previously known as the Voluntary Euthanasia Society), argue legalisation is necessary on the basis of three main arguments: control, comfort and compassion. Each of these arguments are problematic. There are limits to autonomy and the control we can exert over our lives; especially when the autonomy of a vocal few infringes upon the security of the many other vulnerable lives. [3] As a consultant anaesthetist and intensivist who has managed the symptoms of many dying patients, I can honestly say I have never encountered an actively dying patient whose physical pain I have not been able to address. As to the compassion argument, that ‘we would never treat our pets like this’, I would say that compassion means caring for our patients, not killing them.‘Neither will I administer a poison to anybody when asked to do so, nor will I suggest such a course.’
The BMA survey
Although ‘assisted dying’ would be introduced for those deemed to be in their last six months of life (you know as well as I do how poor we are at prognosticating that),4 this stipulation will inevitably and incrementally be extended to many other groups of patients – those with chronic illness, disability, even children. Not to do so would be seen as discriminatory. It is interesting that in the survey that the BMA motion refers to,[5] the doctors most closely involved in the care of dying patients (palliative care physicians, GPs, oncologists, geriatricians) are some of the most opposed to ‘assisted dying’ – they know first-hand it is unnecessary, unethical and unregulatable. Despite half of those polled endorsing PAS, only a minority would be prepared to actively participate (‘OK, but someone else can do it’?).[6] There was no majority for euthanasia, neither in principle nor practice. And PAS inevitably leads to euthanasia: it is actually quite hard to kill people who are not already actively dying. There are some patients who just won’t die even when they self-administer a lethal cocktail – some require a physician to finish them off. Why do you think prisoners on death row have a doctor on hand for the occasions when even the lethal injection fails? Seventy-five years ago this month, the BMA held an international medical conference where the medical war crimes uncovered at the Nuremberg trials were discussed, including all kinds of ‘mercy killing’ – the natural nadir of the slippery slope that happens when doctors assent to the ideology that some lives are not worth living. The upshot was a statement submitted to the World Medical Association the following year:[7]The World Medical Association recently reaffirmed its opposition to both PAS and euthanasia.[8] ‘Assisted dying’ is not progressive, a moving with the times. It is regressive and goes against the grain of thousands of years of Western medical culture.‘Although there have been many changes in Medicine, the spirit of the Hippocratic Oath cannot change and can be reaffirmed by the profession. It enjoins: The brotherhood of medical men. The motives of service for the good of patients. The duty of curing, the greatest crime being co-operation in the destruction of life by murder, suicide…’