Early morning vote advances Illinois’ 'Terminally Ill Patients Act,'
sparks outcry
[November 01, 2025]
By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – A controversial bill allowing terminally ill
patients in Illinois to self-administer life-ending medication passed
the legislature early Friday, sparking fierce debate over its substance
and process.
On the Senate floor at about 3 a.m., state Sen. Linda Holmes, D-Aurora,
said her bill, the “Terminally Ill Patients Act,” would let adults with
less than six months to live request a prescription to self-end their
suffering.
“Very, very simply, this allows a person … age 18 or older who receives
a diagnosis of six months or less to live and is mentally competent to
make an informed decision to have the option of self-administering a
prescription to end their suffering,” said Holmes.
Holmes says the bill includes over 20 safeguards, including confirmation
from two physicians that the patient has six months or less to live,
mental competency evaluations, waiting periods between requests, and
written consent to ensure the decision is voluntary and free from
coercion.
State Rep. Bill Hauter, R-Morton, counters that even with such measures,
the bill violates doctors’ “do no harm” oath and could easily expand
beyond its intended limits.

“Every state and country that’s tried it starts by saying it’s only for
those with weeks to live, but it quickly expands to any age or
condition, and before long, patients aren’t just offered it as an
option, it becomes the only option.” Hauter noted concerns about
insurance incentives. “The least expensive care is that you’re dead and
they don’t have to pay for your expensive cancer treatment or whatever
chronic disease you may have.”
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Hauter warned that the bill lets patients obtain and use the
medication without any medical supervision, a concern shared by the
Illinois State Medical Society and the American Medical Association,
which say it fundamentally violates physicians’ oath to “do no
harm.”
“It’s not at a hospital at all, there’s no requirement to have any
medical personnel around,” he said. “You could have a whole bowl of
pills, mailed to your house, with no oversight. Pharmacies are going
to opt out, so only a few will dispense them. and then what? They’ll
start mailing them,” Hauter told The Center Square.
State Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview, framed the measure as an act of
mercy.
“This is not suicide,” Fine said. “This is compassion.”
Hauter also blasted the late-night passage process, calling it
“outrageous” that such a major policy was approved about 2 a.m. with
little public notice or debate.
“The process stinks. They could have brought this up during the
hundreds of hours we’ve been doing nothing, when stakeholders could
have had their voices heard. Instead, they abruptly bring it to the
floor at 2 a.m. in the fall veto session, one of the most
controversial and impactful pieces of legislation, with no warning.
It’s just outrageous,” said Hauter.
If the bill is signed into law, Illinois would join 11 other states
and Washington, D.C., in legalizing some form of physician assisted
suicide. |