The Royal College of Physicians today launched a survey to
assess its members’ views on assisted suicide.
The survey consists of four multi-choice questions with the
option to write a more detailed response. It closes on 17 November.
The questions are:
1. Do you support a change in the law to
permit assisted suicide by the terminally ill with the assistance of doctors?
(Yes/No/Yes, but not by doctors)
2. We ask you to consider the following
statement (this is a repeat of the question we asked when we last surveyed in
2006 and is included for comparative purposes):
'(We) believe that with improvements in palliative care, good clinical care can be provided within existing legislation, and that patients can die with dignity. A change in legislation is not needed.' (Yes/No)
'(We) believe that with improvements in palliative care, good clinical care can be provided within existing legislation, and that patients can die with dignity. A change in legislation is not needed.' (Yes/No)
3. What should the College’s position be on
‘assisted dying’ (as defined in the RCP’s consultation
document)? (In favour/opposed/neutral or no stance)
4. Regardless of your support or opposition
to change, in the event of legislation receiving royal assent, would you
personally be prepared to participate actively in ‘assisted dying’? (In
favour/opposed/neutral or no stance)
The accompanying consultation
document explains that the College last surveyed its membership’s views on
this issue in 2006 when the House of Lords was considering Lord Joffe’s Assisted
Dying for the Terminally Ill.
At that time 73.2% of UK-based RCP fellows and collegiate
members who responded did not believe a change in the law was needed, with 26%
believing the law should change. The vote came out just before the Bill’s
second reading in the House of Lords and helped to contribute to its defeat by
148 votes to 100.
This policy was later reaffirmed by the RCP’s Council in
2012.
This new survey has been prompted by Lord Falconer’s Assisted
Dying Bill which seeks to legalise assisted suicide for mentally competent
adults with less than six months to live. It has its committee stage (when
amendments to the bill are considered and debated) on 7 November.
I have previously
argued that the Falconer Bill is a recipe for the abuse of elderly and
disabled people. Furthermore, public support for it falls
from 73% to just 43% when the major arguments against it are heard.
There are also strong
signals coming from the US state of Oregon, where very similar legislation
was passed in 1997, that this is not the route to follow. The experience of other
jurisdictions, like the
Netherlands and Belgium,
casts a dark shadow.
As the RCP consultation document notes, the BMA, the Royal
College of Surgeons of England, the Royal College of General Practitioners and
the Association for Palliative Medicine are also opposed to a change in the law
on assisted dying.
Assisted suicide is unnecessary, dangerous and
uncontrollable. The strong
arguments against legalising assisted suicide, or any other form of
euthanasia, need to be heard.
We can be sure that the vocal
minority of doctors who support such legislation will do their best to skew
this vote. This is why it is imperative that the majority speaks clearly.
If you have received an email from the RCP about this vote, please
don’t ignore it. It takes only minutes to answer the four multi-choice questions
above, and not much more to write something sensible in the comment box.
It is the very least we can do to protect our patients and
keep the law safe.
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