New UK bill aims to legalize assisted dying for people who are
terminally ill
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[October 16, 2024]
By MARIA CHENG
LONDON (AP) — A new bill aiming to legalize assisted dying in Britain is
to be introduced in Parliament on Wednesday, marking the first time in
nearly a decade that the House of Commons will debate allowing doctors
to help end people’s lives after previous court challenges to change a
legal blanket ban failed.
Labour politician Kim Leadbeater will introduce a bill granting
terminally ill people in England and Wales a way to allow physicians to
help them die, although the details won’t be released until later in the
month ahead of a Parliamentary vote.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has promised that lawmakers will have a
“free vote,” meaning they will not be obliged to vote along party lines.
Starmer supported a 2015 assisted dying bill and has said “there are
grounds for changing the law.”
“There is absolutely no question of disabled people or those with mental
illness who are not terminally ill being pressured to end their lives,”
Leadbeater said in a statement. She said it is “important that we get
the legislation right, with the necessary protections and safeguards in
place.”
Leadbeater’s bill is likely to be similar to an assisted dying bill
introduced in the House of Lords earlier this year that has only made
slow progress.
The unelected House of Lords studies and amends legislation passed by
the elected House of Commons. While bills can originate in the Lords,
they rarely become law.
The bill introduced in the House of Lords restricts assisted dying to
adults with six or fewer months to live and requires permission from the
High Court after having a declaration signed by two doctors, among other
criteria.
Esther Rantzen, the founder of a British children’s charity who has
advanced lung cancer, encouraged people to write to their local member
of Parliament, saying “all we are asking for is the right to choose.”
Rantzen said in the absence of a legal way to end her life in Britain,
she plans to travel to Switzerland, where assisted suicide is legal for
foreigners.
Opponents of assisted dying, however, say there is no way to change the
law without endangering vulnerable people, according to actress Liz
Carr, a disability rights campaigner.
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A small demonstration by people advocating assisted dying hold a
protest outside the Hoses of Parliament as a bill to legalise
assisted dying is to be put before lawmakers in London, England,
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)
Assisted suicide — where patients
take a lethal drink prescribed by a doctor — is legal in Australia,
Belgium, Canada, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal,
Spain, Switzerland and parts of the U.S., with regulations on
qualifying criteria varying by jurisdiction.
Naomi Richards, an anthropologist who specializes in death and dying
at the University of Glasgow, said the number of people who might
make use of assisted dying, if legalized in Britain, would be fairly
limited, unless the public pushed for wider access.
“These are questions that in a democracy will only be answered
further down the road,” she said.
Trudo Lemmens, a professor of health law and policy at the
University of Toronto, said Britain’s first priority should be to
address inequities in health care across the U.K.
“What we’ve seen is that people ask for medical assistance in dying
because they feel they’re a burden to others,” Lemmens said,
referring to Canada after it legalized assisted dying in 2016.
“Pressure inevitably increases to expand it beyond what is
legislated,” Lemmens said. “Countries should be extremely careful on
this and deeply study what has happened in other jurisdictions
before they allow end-of-life termination by physicians.”
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Associated Press writer Jill Lawless contributed to this report.
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