Sunday 15 April 2012

Huge increase in assisted suicide cases in Oregon and Switzerland sounds strong warning to Britain

There has been a massive increase in cases of assisted suicide in both Oregon and Switzerland over recent years according to the latest figures.

The Oregon ‘Death with Dignity Act’ allows terminally-ill Oregonians ‘to end their lives through the voluntary self-administration of lethal medications, expressly prescribed by a physician for that purpose’.

It also requires the Oregon Health Authority to collect information about the patients and physicians who participate in the Act, and publish an annual statistical report.

The latest figures show that cases of assisted suicide have gone from 16 in 1998 to 71 in 2011, an increase of 450% (see chart).

The US state of Oregon legalised assisted suicide in 1997 following a referendum. Thus far over 100 attempts to get other US state parliaments to change their laws have failed and only the state of Washington has followed suit, again on the basis of a referendum.

Switzerland has seen a 700% increase in assisted suicides over the same period. Swiss authorities have recorded a steady rise of assisted suicides in recent years, from 43 in 1998 to 297 in 2009. Earlier figures are not available, even though assisted suicide has been legal in Switzerland since 1942.

These figures include only Swiss nationals and not the growing number of people from abroad who are making use of facilities like Dignitas.

The experience of both countries demonstrates that when assisted suicide is legalised there will inevitably be incremental extension.

A major factor fuelling this increase is suicide contagion - the so-called Werther effect. This is particularly dangerous when assisted suicides are backed by celebrities as they are here and given high media profile as they are frequently by the BBC.

The Oregon and Swiss numbers may not seem large to some but we need to remember that Oregon and Switzerland have small populations relative to the UK.

Back in 2006 the House of Lords calculated that with an Oregon-type law we would have about 650 cases of assisted suicide a year in Britain. But given the increase of numbers in Oregon the UK equivalent would now be well over 1,000. Currently assisted suicide is illegal here and we see only 15-20 Britons going to Dignitas in Switzerland to die each year.

However, later this year we will see renewed attempts to change the law in this country.

Margo Macdonald is planning to present a bill based on the Oregon model to the Scottish Parliament and the pressure group Dignity in Dying (formerly the Voluntary Euthanasia) is planning a mass lobby of the Westminster Parliament on 4 July in support of a new bill they plan to introduce by means of their parliamentary wing, the All Party Group on ‘Choice at the End of Life’.

We should learn from the Oregon and Swiss experience and be resisting these moves.

Any change in the law to allow assisted suicide (a form of euthanasia) would inevitably place pressure on vulnerable people to end their lives so as not to be a burden on others and these pressures would be particularly acutely felt at a time of economic recession when many families are struggling to make ends meet and health budgets are being slashed.

And once legalised there will inevitably be incremental extension as we have seen in Oregon and Switzerland. Legalisation leads to normalisation.

Let’s not go there.

4 comments:

  1. You don't actually say why the Oregon and Swiss "experiences" need to be resisted. All you seem to state is that more and more people are adopting assisted suicide - AND THAT'S BAD!

    Just stating that there are increases isn't an argument for or against anything.

    At the end you say "allow[ing] assisted suicide *inevitably* places pressure on vulnerable people ...". Where on earth do you get that from? You really have evidence that people will start suggesting to their aged relatives "that it's time to consider your own suicide"? Or are you just making stuff up? Is there evidence from Oregon that this is happening? Or is it just your gut-feeling?

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  2. Perhaps we could flesh out your argument by finding cases from Switzerand and Oregon of people who were pressurised into ending their lives prematurely and comparing their experience with that of UK suicides who were suffering from terminal illnesses which were not assisted. Comparing those two bodies of evidence would enable us to decide which as most compassionate. Also we could work out exactly what kinds of pressure we were trying to error trap. So the starting point would be to find some Swiss or Oregnian cases that substantiate your assertion — or even one?

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    1. One of the main difficulties in providing such evidence is that the key witnesses in each case are dead and those still available to give account of pressures and motives are precisely those who would most stand to gain emotionally or financially from their deaths.

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    2. I do understand the problem because the people we are talking about, in either the UK or Switzerland/Oregon are dead. The issue is about how they died, and in what context. You claim that those who died in Switzerland and Oregon were influenced by the state of the law in their country towards terminating their lives, or at ay rate their relatives (many of whom are still alive, I presume) were. All I'm asking for is some evidence for this assertion. Now you seem to be telling me there isn't any and can't be. I am underwhelmed.

      I note in passing that the proportion of Oregonians actually using their prescriptions seems to be declining slightly, but admit that comparisons are ludicrous, especially percentage ones, comparing 2012 to 1997, because it was an entirely new law, and the numbers involved are almost statistically negligible as a proportion of the whole population of either jurisdiction.

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