The Guardian this week has run
the story of a man with motor neurone
disease who wants to end his life.
Paul Chamberlain, 66, a former chartered accountant from Surrey,
we are told, has obtained the drugs he needs ‘from overseas’.
Health
editor Sarah Boseley (pictured) uses Chamberlain’s case to promote Lord
Falconer’s Assisted Dying Bill, which has been drafted by Dignity in Dying
(the former Voluntary Euthanasia Society) and is due to have its second reading
in the House of Lords this autumn.
A
Samaritans contact phone number is given for those who might be ‘struggling to
cope’ but this is a largely empty gesture aimed at giving respectability to a
piece of journalistic propaganda which suggests that it can be both right and
reasonable for sick people to kill themselves.
The WHO
international guidelines on suicide portrayal refer
to over 50 published studies, systematic reviews of which have consistently
drawn the same conclusion, that media reporting of suicide can lead to
imitative suicidal behaviours.
This
phenomenon is variably termed
suicide contagion, copycat suicide, suicide cluster or the Werther
effect.
Its recommendations to media professionals include the following:
· Avoid language which sensationalises or normalises suicide, or presents it as a solution to problems
· Avoid prominent placement and undue repetition of stories about suicide
· Avoid explicit description of the method used in a completed or attempted suicide
· Avoid providing detailed information about the site of a completed or attempted suicide
· Take particular care in reporting celebrity suicides
Its recommendations to media professionals include the following:
· Avoid language which sensationalises or normalises suicide, or presents it as a solution to problems
· Avoid prominent placement and undue repetition of stories about suicide
· Avoid explicit description of the method used in a completed or attempted suicide
· Avoid providing detailed information about the site of a completed or attempted suicide
· Take particular care in reporting celebrity suicides
By
portraying this unfortunate man as a hero who is taking a brave and reasonable
course of action, and by failing to do justice to the wider context of the
debate, Boseley is steering vulnerable people toward suicide.
In
so doing she has also bought into the myth that we should consider suicide in
people who are sick or disabled as somehow different from suicide for those
with mental health problems or who feel their lives are no longer worth living
for other reasons.
But
the idea that suicide should be promoted in the former group but prevented in
the latter creates a false distinction and is actually profoundly
discriminatory.
In
reality most sick and disabled people do not want and to die and most people
who do wish to die are neither sick nor disabled.
Our
response to all suicidal ideation should not be to
hand over a poisoned chalice but to ask how we can manage the underlying
problem better.
There
are about 5,000 people in the UK with motor neurone disease (MND). About 1,000
die with the condition each year, three every day.
The
vast majority do not want so-called ‘assisted dying’ (a euphemism for being
poisoned with lethal drugs) but rather ‘assisted living’ until they die
naturally.
But
Boseley’s article gives no voice to this silent group. Nor are we told anything
about the care available for people with MND. No
one representing the majority of those with the disease (like Alistair
Banks) is given an opportunity to put a contrary view.
We
also learn nothing about the rapid escalation of euthanasia and assisted
suicide cases in the Netherlands, Oregon, Switzerland and Belgium which have legalised the
practice but instead, without any evidence, are assured that such problems are
imaginary.
Is
it mere coincidence that this story follows hot on the heels of the visit of
campaigner Philip
Nitschke (aka Dr Death) who
has just run a seminar in London advising attendees about how to obtain lethal
drugs over the internet?
Thus
far over
50 people in his native Australia have killed themselves with a drug which
he promotes. One third of these were people in their 20s and 30s. Was it
Nitschke, I wonder, who is also ‘helping’ Chamberlain?
Assisting
suicide is illegal in Britain for good reasons.
First, any change in the law to allow assisted suicide or
euthanasia would place pressure on vulnerable people to end their lives for
fear of being a financial, emotional or care burden upon others. This would
especially affect people who are disabled, elderly, sick or depressed.
Second, persistent requests for euthanasia are extremely rare if
people are properly cared for so our priority must rather be to ensure that
good care addressing people's physical, psychological, social and spiritual
needs is accessible to all.
Third, hard cases, like that of Paul Chamberlain, make bad law.
Even in a free democratic society there are limits to human freedom and the law
must not be changed to accommodate the wishes of a small number of desperate
and determined people.
In accepting that suicide is sometimes right and that there is
such a thing as a life not worth living Boseley crosses two critical and
dangerous rubicons.
Her propaganda and Falconer’s
bill should be given similar
short shrift.
Suicide occurs among other animals, too.
ReplyDeletehttp://news.discovery.com/animals/zoo-animals/animal-suicide-behavior.htm
And by opposing compassionate legislation, you're encouraging people to take their lives sooner, to escape torture.
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