I am passionate about cricket. I am not that good at it (I
once played for the Lynfield College social team which was bowled out for 5!)
but since I was a teenager I have loved listening to radio cricket commentaries
and from a good description can picture exactly what is happening on the field.
For this reason I have always appreciated Jonathan Agnew (‘Aggers’)
(pictured). Not only is he an excellent radio commentator but he also played personally
to a high level in county cricket and knows what he is talking about.
Being an expert on cricket, however, does not make him an
expert on important issues of public policy like assisted suicide.
It was deeply disappointed today to see him jumping on the
pro-euthanasia bandwagon in comments carried by the Telegraph,
Times, Daily
Mail and a host of other media outlets.
Apparently he previously offered to accompany Brian Dodds,
his second wife’s ex-husband, to the Dignitas assisted suicide facility in Zurich after
he had Motor Neurone Disease diagnosed.
Mr Dodds didn’t take him up on his offer and subsequently
died in England from the disease in 2005.
In a quite bizarre twist Agnew says he is unable to remember
whether he ever mentioned the conversation to Dodds’ former wife, to whom he is
now married.
Agnew advances
the usual tired superficial arguments to advance his position (‘I had my
dog put down’ and ‘the choice should be left up to the individual’) without
displaying any appreciation of the complex issues involved, not least the fact
that his dog’s death (since there was no consent given) was a case of
euthanasia rather than assisted suicide.
Legalizing euthanasia and/or assisted suicide create a right to be killed or allow a physician to be involved with causing your death, it is not simply about a right to die. It is primarily one of public safety. This is why British parliaments have roundly rejected it on three occasions in the last seven years and why the medical profession and disability rights groups remain so strongly opposed to it.
Legalizing euthanasia and/or assisted suicide create a right to be killed or allow a physician to be involved with causing your death, it is not simply about a right to die. It is primarily one of public safety. This is why British parliaments have roundly rejected it on three occasions in the last seven years and why the medical profession and disability rights groups remain so strongly opposed to it.
That the
media considers a sports commentator commenting on assisted suicide to be
newsworthy reveals how superficial this debate has become.
But there is another more serious issue with Agnew seeking media support to promote euthanasia and assisted suicide. The reality of the copy-cat suicide effect is well known and that is why the World Health Organization established a set of guidelines for the media to help prevent suicide.
The WHO report (World Health Organization’s Preventing Suicide: A Resource for Media Professionals) makes the point that ‘the degree of publicity given to a suicide story is directly correlated with the number of subsequent suicides. Cases of suicide involving celebrities have had a particularly strong impact’.
This is backed up by a major review of 42 studies on the impact of publicized suicide stories in the media on the incidence of suicide in the real world published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health in 2003.
But there is another more serious issue with Agnew seeking media support to promote euthanasia and assisted suicide. The reality of the copy-cat suicide effect is well known and that is why the World Health Organization established a set of guidelines for the media to help prevent suicide.
The WHO report (World Health Organization’s Preventing Suicide: A Resource for Media Professionals) makes the point that ‘the degree of publicity given to a suicide story is directly correlated with the number of subsequent suicides. Cases of suicide involving celebrities have had a particularly strong impact’.
This is backed up by a major review of 42 studies on the impact of publicized suicide stories in the media on the incidence of suicide in the real world published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health in 2003.
This found that ‘studies measuring the effect of either an
entertainment or political celebrity suicide story were 14.3 times more likely
to find a copycat effect than studies that did not. Studies based on a real as
opposed to fictional story were 4.03 times more likely to uncover a copycat
effect.’
In other words, celebrities like Agnew, who throw their weight behind promoting suicide as a solution to health problems, may unwittingly be contributing to vulnerable people being pushed over the edge into taking their own lives.
It was good to see Agnew last month encouraging his 240,000 Twitter followers to donate to the fundraising web page set up by his stepson, who climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to raise money for the Motor Neurone Disease Association.
In other words, celebrities like Agnew, who throw their weight behind promoting suicide as a solution to health problems, may unwittingly be contributing to vulnerable people being pushed over the edge into taking their own lives.
It was good to see Agnew last month encouraging his 240,000 Twitter followers to donate to the fundraising web page set up by his stepson, who climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to raise money for the Motor Neurone Disease Association.
He must surely then be aware that the overwhelming vast majority
of people suffering from motor neurone disease (MND), presumably like his
wife’s former husband, do not actually want ‘assisted dying’ but ‘assisted
living’, help to die naturally in as much comfort as possible. Our focus should be on care, not killing.
It would therefore be a far better use of his time to draw attention to the stories of good role models like South African rugby hero Joost
var der Westhuizen, currently dying from MND, rather than using his
celebrity status to shoot his mouth off on a subject he is not actually qualified
to address.
Oh dear! So a former cricketer cannot possibly be qualified to have a different opinion (your assumption) to yours? Does that, in fact, include the entire human race, or just sportsmen?
ReplyDeleteYou assume that I am pro suicide. You do so because at a dreadful moment in my friend's life, I said I would support him, if that was what HE wished. Big difference.
In fact, the whole point is that although when fit and well Brian would have undoubtedly have said he would go to Dignitas if diagnosed with a fatal illness, he chose to fight to the end when in fact he became terminally ill.
Odd how you appear to have twisted your own argument! Still, obviously I am not the intelligent one.
Kind regards
Jonathan Agnew
You are fully entitled to hold and express an opinion on this matter as you have Jonathan. My point was that, whereas you are an expert on cricket, you are not similarly qualified to address important matters of public policy. In fact there are real dangers in you doing so. It's not about intelligence. It's rather an issue of expertise and experience.
DeleteWarm regards
Peter
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