Disability advocates warn that a lack of support leads to assisted suicide | The Paradise News – The Paradise News

As assisted suicide spreads around the world, more and more people with disabilities are falling victim. For many, this is confirmation that a life with a disability is one not worth leading, full of agony, pain, and suffering. Yet for disability advocates, the problem is not the disability itself, but the lack of support and accommodations they face.

Kathleen Nicole ONeal wrote an op-ed for Not Dead Yet, a non-profit that opposes assisted suicide and euthanasia, arguing that the use of assisted suicide by people with disabilities is a symptom of a discriminatory system that has failed to give the disabled more autonomy.

One of the examples ONeal cites is Federico Carboni, an Italian man who spent most of his life able-bodied. But 12 years ago, he was in an automobile accident, and woke up from a coma to find himself paralyzed. He lived the next years of his life as a quadriplegic, until he was able to successfully petition the Italian government to allow him to be euthanized. Carboni died earlier this year.

ONeal pointed out that one of Carbonis last statements shows how the problem was not one of disability, but of autonomy:

I do not deny that I am sorry to take leave of life. I would be false and a liar if I said the opposite because life is fantastic, and we only have one. But unfortunately, it went like this. I have done everything possible to be able to live as well as possible and try to recover the maximum from my disability, but by now I am both mentally and physically exhausted. I do not have a minimum of autonomy in daily life, I am at the mercy of events, I depend on others for everything, I am like a boat adrift in the ocean. I am aware of my physical condition and future prospects so I am totally calm and calm about what I will do.

ONeal explained, What I find haunting about this is that ultimately this is an indictment of a terrible personal care services (aka caregiving) system, a system that fails to pay workers enough to create a reliable workforce and a system that fails to grant disabled people sufficient authority to control their services. Even the most physically disabled people should feel independent and empowered by their attendant services and apparently this is not what was happening in Carbonis life.

Unfortunately, as ONeal explained, the solution to this problem is often not to improve the situation for people with disabilities. Its to make assisted suicide and euthanasia available for them. Simply put, assisted suicide is not a solution but an extension of the devaluation disabled people experience, she wrote. Its like saying, Disability equals no autonomy so prepare to die.

Along with of poor access to medical care and support services, people with disabilities are routinely ignored, forgotten, and then pushed towards death. And, ONeal said, they deserve better.

READ:Family shocked to learn healthy American sisters died by assisted suicide in Switzerland

Federico Carboni did not deserve the death penalty, she said, adding, He deserved attendant services that centered his autonomy, his needs, his wants, his wishes, and his will. His life would have been different had he had that opportunity. We as a culture need to get over this notion that needing help with physical bodily functions is an affront to ones dignity. This is the logic of ableism.

Catalina Devandas Aguilar, a Costa Rican lawyer and the United Nations first Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, spent a week in Canada investigating whether or not people with disabilities are given the health care and support they need. Yet she discovered numerous cases of individuals who were pressured into euthanasia or placement in nursing homes, as well as a court system that does not reinforce their rights.

Gerard Quinn, Olivier De Schutter, and Claudia Mahler three experts who sit on the United Nations Office of Human Rights issued a statement condemning the growing trend of offering euthanasia solely due to disability. We all accept that it could never be a well-reasoned decision for a person belonging to any other protected group be it a racial minority, gender or sexual minorities to end their lives because they experience suffering on account of their status, they wrote in the statement. Disability should never be a ground or justification to end someones life directly or indirectly.

Assisted suicide is, in and of itself, inherently ableist. Most people are not undergoing assisted suicide due to fears of a painful death; in fact, a loss of autonomy has been found to be the most commonly cited reason people give for wanting to die. And legalizing assisted suicide essentially tells people with disabilities that theyre right for wanting to die, rather than offering them a reason to live. It seems that saving the life of a suicidal person is only reserved for the young, healthy, and able-bodied. If youre disabled, you will be helped into suicide, and disability advocates are rightly calling foul.

Like Live Action News on Facebookfor more pro-life news and commentary!

See the original post:

Disability advocates warn that a lack of support leads to assisted suicide | The Paradise News - The Paradise News

Related Posts

Comments are closed.