Assisted-suicide bill
approved by California Assembly
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[September 10, 2015] By
Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - A
hard-fought measure to legalize physician-assisted suicide in California
cleared the state Assembly on Wednesday despite opposition from
religious groups and advocates for the disabled, and moved to the state
Senate, where it was widely expected to gain final passage.
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The measure, patterned after an Oregon law allowing terminally ill
patients to obtain medication prescribed to end their lives, passed
43-34 after weeks of hearings and impassioned debate.
"Imagine that it's one of your constituents, suffering in agonizing
pain - their pain medication no longer works," said Assembly member
Luis Alejo, a Democrat from Watsonville who supported the bill.
"Then imagine that it's your father or your mother or your
grandparents or your daughter."
Under the bill, which was pulled for lack of support in July but
reintroduced last month as part of a special legislative session to
deal with healthcare issues, two doctors would have to determine
that a patient had no more than six months to live before the
medication could be prescribed.
It also would require a patient seeking life-ending drugs to be
mentally competent and to present two separate requests to an
attending physician and for two witnesses to attest to the patient's
wish to die.

The bill makes it a felony to coerce, trick or force someone into
taking the medication.
Physician-assisted suicide also is legal in Washington state,
Montana and Vermont.
The issue gained new impetus in the most populous U.S. state last
year after a 29-year-old brain cancer patient, Brittany Maynard,
moved from California to Oregon to take advantage of that state's
Death with Dignity Act and was featured on the cover of People
magazine.
A measure introduced after Maynard's death won the support of the
state Senate in June, but died in the Assembly's Health Committee,
amid opposition from the Roman Catholic Church, disability rights
advocates and others.
After finally clearing the full Assembly, the measure now returns to
the Senate, where it is seen as likely to pass again.
The Legislature is required to pass regular-session bills by
midnight on Friday, although lawmakers may opt to stay longer to
handle special-session measures.
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Governor Jerry Brown, a Democrat who was a Jesuit seminary student
before entering politics, has not taken a position on the
legislation. If it passes and he does not veto it, the bill would go
into effect next year.
Polls show consistent support for such a measure in California, and
in May the California Medical Association changed its longstanding
opposition to a neutral stance.
Physician-assisted suicide is still opposed by many doctors who feel
they should preserve life rather than help end it. Some skeptics
have raised concerns that disabled patients, especially the poor,
will be pushed to end their lives by insurance companies or
relatives who did not want to care for them.
Three Assembly Republicans joined 40 Democrats in voting for the
bill on Wednesday, after lawmakers added "sunset" language under
which the statute would expire in 10 years unless the Legislature
voted to extend it.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Additional reporting by Steve
Gorman; Editing by Bill Trott, Sandra Maler and Ken Wills)
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