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Category Archives: Euthanasia

Welcome to Home Pet Euthanasia of Southern California …

Posted: April 14, 2017 at 12:14 am

If you are visiting our website, chances are that you either have already made the decision that it is time to let go of your pet or the time is drawing near and you want to be prepared. You probably are looking for a way to make this transition easier for your pet, to lessen his suffering, make it painless and stress free. Above all, you are looking for a caring and compassionate person to be there for your baby and for your family in such a difficult time.

Your pet may have severe arthritis, cancer, kidney failure, some other debilitating disease or he or she is just very old. He or She has been part of your life for many years, may have helped you through tough times, has been a faithful companion. Now, you see it in your pet's eyes. The love is still there but you also see suffering.

There is a huge difference between saying goodbye in the privacy and comfort of your home versus taking your pet to the vet's for that last, dreaded trip.

In a few words: compassion, caring, in the safety of your home, relaxed, peaceful, stress-free, no cold, stainless steel, ... To read more about why you should choose a home euthanasia, click here.

You undoubtedly want your pet to be comfortable at home with you in his last moments. You want your pet to feel your reassuring touch. You want him to be on his soft, comfortable bed. You want these last moments to be stress-free, peaceful, at home, in familiar surroundings. No cold, stainless steel table, perhaps you want him lying next to you. You want this moment to be quiet, calm, and for your baby to be in gentle, caring, kind and loving hands.

What do you do when the time has come? How do you make it easier on your pet, on your family and on yourself? How do you know the time has come? Do you know what to expect? These are all questions that will be answered on this website.

We offer a compassionate, caring and gentle pet euthanasia service done in the comfort of your own home so that your beloved pet doesn't have to be put in a stressful situation, having to be lifted into the car, going into a noisy, busy veterinary hospital to spend the last few moments of his or her life on a cold stainless steel table.

We primarily service the areas of Orange County, Riverside County, Los Angeles County, part of San Diego County, part of Ventura County and part of San Bernardino County. But wherever you are in the world, the information on our website will help you through this difficult event of your life that is the passing of your pet. We will gently guide you through the difficult decisions you will have to make and ensure that you have full understanding of what is ahead.

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Pushing Euthanasia with Organ Harvesting – National Review

Posted: at 12:14 am

Back in 1993, I warned in my first anti-euthanasia column, published in Newsweek, that once killing became accepted as a solution to human suffering, eventually it would lead to conjoining the death procedure with organ harvesting as a plum to society.

Alarmist! my critics cried. Slippery slope purveyor,they sniffed.

No. Prescient. In Netherlands and Belgium, conjoining euthanasia and organ harvesting is now a fact on the groundjust as I warned againstand there is talk of permitting that same approach in Canada.

One of the most alarming aspectsof this radical change in transplant ethicshas been the shrugging silence from professionaltransplant organizations.Now, the idea of conjoined killing and harvesting is being presented positively in the media as a splendid way of ending the organ shortage.

Thats certainly the general sense of a story published by the Martha Henriques, Science Reporter for theInternational Business Times. From, Why Dont More People Who Choose Euthanasia Donate Their Organs?

One of the main reasons that people who choose euthanasia do not donate organs is the setting in which they die. The most important reason is that people would get euthanised in the hospital. They cant die at home quietly with the family and the family doctor, study author Ernest van Heurn of Emma Childrens Hospital AMC and the VU University medical centre, the Netherlands, told IBTimes UK.

But there are solutions for that. What you can do but only at the explicit request of a person who wants euthanasia is to get sedation at home with the family, and then the family has the opportunity to stay at home while the patient is taken to the hospital and there the euthanasia is done.

Notice, there is no discussion of applying suicide prevention to people who ask for euthanasia. No, the emphasis is on finding ways to help people who decide to be killed to come to the organ donationdecision.

Heres what Oxford bioethicist, Julian Savulescu told Henriques:

But offering people the option to donate their organs after death can be done in an ethical way if the two practices of donation and euthanasia are kept firmly separate, he said. These difficult conversations neednt be done by the main doctor who is caring for the patient and with whom the patient has discussed euthanasia, he said.

This is a very important option to give people who have requested euthanasia. Its a reality that one person can save seven eight lives with zero cost to themselves if they have otherwise decided to die, said Savulescu. They ought to have the option of saving other peoples lives after their death.

If Henriques ever bothered to interview those who thinks conjoining euthanasia and organ harvesting is a very bad and dangerous idea, she didnt report on their views.

Had she done so, she might have reported a hard truth that her story omitted: Many, if not most, of those whose homicides were combined with after-death organ harvesting were either disabled or mentally ill.

In other words, these were not people who would soon die anyway, but those who wouldnt. In fact, Belgian doctors have held Powerpoint seminars alerting colleagues to be on the lookout for euthanasia patients with neuromuscular disabilities because they tend to have good organs.

Some might ask, if these patients want euthanasia, why not get some good out of their deaths?Coupling organ harvesting with mercy killing creates a strong emotional inducement to suicide, particularly for people who are culturally devalued and depressed and, indeed, who might worry that they are a burden on loved ones and society.

Letting people in existential crisis believe that their deaths have greater value than their lives could push them into a lethal decision. Worse, if society ever comes to see such people as so many organ farms, our perceptions of the inherent value of their lives could take a terrible and deadly turn.

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Pushing Euthanasia with Organ Harvesting - National Review

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When it comes to euthanasia, not all slippery slope arguments are … – The Guardian

Posted: at 12:14 am

The Twittersphere went into momentary meltdown on Monday night after a spat on ABCs Q&A between bioethics professor Margaret Somerville and 81-year-old audience member Patricia Fellows.

Somerville defended, at some length, her opposition to euthanasia. Fellows responded to Somervilles academic exposition with one word: bullshit!.

For many, this was the highlight of the episode. Yet I was more intrigued to see Tony Jones suspicion of Somervilles so-called slippery slope argument against legalising assisted dying. As Somerville discussed the steady liberalisation of euthanasia laws in the Netherlands, Jones himself called bullshit (albeit in a more intellectual, sophisticated way).

Are you making a slippery slope argument, Margo?, he interjected.

The background to the sort of question Jones asked, and widespread community suspicion of arguments about so-called euthanasia creep, is that these sorts of claims rely on what in ethics and philosophy we call the slippery slope fallacy.

They assume that event A will necessarily be followed by event B, even when there is no demonstrated causal or probable relationship between event A and B. As philosophers are at pains to point out, there is a need for empirical evidence or sound inferential reasoning to support the claim that event B will necessarily (or probably) follow on from event A.

Without this evidence, the argument is invalid. I cant just claim, for example, that the legalisation of medicinal marijuana leads to the legalisation of ice I need to show some empirical or logical connection between the two.

But (and its a big but) there is such a thing as a good and valid slippery slope argument. A good slippery slope argument demonstrates a causal or probable relationship between event A and B, such that event B can legitimately be expected to occur if event A is allowed to occur.

In the context of the euthanasia debate, it is in the interest of intellectual honesty as well as prudent policy deliberation that we clearly distinguish good slippery slope claims from the bad ones.

There is certainly no shortage of dubious slippery slope arguments. Examples are the apocalyptic warnings of Nazi Germany-style euthanasia if we legalise assisted dying.

In last years euthanasia debate in South Australia, for example, the Liberal MP Adrian Pederick made precisely this comparison when he said:

This is the sort of thing that was done in the 40s in Nazi Germany I just feel that comments like that lead us down a slippery slope.

As it stands, this is an invalid slippery slope argument. What Pederick didnt show, and needs to show, is some sort of causal or logical relationship between a concern for the allocation of scarce health care resources and the mass, involuntary killing of tens of thousands of disabled, sick and elderly members of the community.

Maybe evidence can be provided but the claim is not self-evident, as his comment seems to suggest.

There are, nevertheless, compelling empirical and logical slippery slope arguments available to defend more modest claims about the normalisation of assisted dying.

Critics of assisted dying often argue euthanasia rates will increase with each year following legalisation. For example, in the Victorian parliaments Inquiry into End of Life Choices, Daniel Mulino MLC warned of a progressive increase in assisted dying if it were legalised in Victoria:

Once legalised, euthanasia and assisted suicide are increasingly taken for granted and seen to be unexceptional both within the medical profession and more broadly within society.

There is significant evidence from the Benelux countries (Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg), as well as the US and Canada, to support this claim. Around 3.7% of all deaths in the Netherlands in 2015 were by virtue of euthanasia or assisted suicide, up from 1.3% when the procedure was legalised in 2002.

And while Dutch legislation changed several times during that period, the steady rate of increase continued even in years when there was no legislative change. Similar figures are available in Belgium and alarming initial figures have just been released for Quebec.

It is true Australian legislatures may adopt an Oregon model of assisted dying legislation, rather than a Benelux model.

Yet there has been a similar documented increase of assisted suicide deaths in Oregon. In fact, the increase has actually been greater, from 16 deaths in 1998 to 132 in 2015.

All of which is to say, there is significant evidence to suggest that, if we do legalise assisted dying in Australia jurisdictions, the practice will be normalised and we will see a steady but significant increase in deaths by such means.

It is true social dynamics are complex and there are a variety of factors that could affect how euthanasia legislation is received in Australian society.

And claims about euthanasia creep dont constitute an argument against euthanasia as such. They are only claims about what might happen when we do legalise assisted dying. Indeed, some proponents of assisted dying might see normalisation as a positive development.

But, by the same token, we shouldnt dismiss such arguments as manifestly false or logically invalid. No one profits from impolitic policy and it would be a monumental blunder to ignore the experience of other countries in our deliberation on this issue.

So, returning to the catalyst of this discussion, was Somervilles argument bullshit?

I dont think it would be fair to critique her views based solely on what was said on Mondays program. Q&A panellists rarely have the opportunity to discuss their views at length and Monday nights episode was no exception.

But, rather than offering a glib and emotional dismissal of the arguments, we need to review the hard facts about euthanasia creep and the social costs of assisted dying. Anything less than this would be, well, bullshit.

This article was originally published on the Conversation.

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When it comes to euthanasia, not all slippery slope arguments are ... - The Guardian

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What is euthanasia and assisted suicide and what is the law in the … – The Sun

Posted: at 12:14 am

Euthanasia and assisted dying is a controversialissue, with passionate campaigners on each side of the argument

THE debate around euthanasia and assisted dying in the UK is a controversial and complicated one.

Some say choosing when to die is to die with dignity, while others say it undermines the value of human life.

Getty Images

So what is euthanasia and assisted suicide and what is the debate surrounding this issue?

The Sun is here to explain the details surrounding this sensitive and divisive subject.

Euthanasia, sometimes known as mercy killing, is the practice of intentionally ending someones life to relieve their pain and suffering.

Assistedsuicide is deliberately helping or encouraging someone to take their own life, for example by providingthem with medicine to do so.

The term comes from an ancient Greek phrase meaning good death.

Both are illegal in the UK with euthanasia carrying a maximum penalty of life in jail, and assisted suicide 14 years. The only exception is passive euthanasia, which is where treatment that might extend someones life is withdrawn such as a life machine being turned off.

The only alternatives for terminally ill patients in the UK arehospice care or refusing treatment, which mentally capable patientshave the right to do.

As a result, some terminally ill people decide to travel abroad to die.In Switzerland, where assisted suicide is legal (but euthanasia is not), you do not have to be a Swiss citizen to use a clinic.However, it is not cheap assisted suicide non-profit Dignitas charges patients 3,380 for its services.

Reuters

Euthanasia anddying is a controversialissue with passionate campaigners on each side of the argument.

People who agree with euthanasia often argue that people should be allowed to die with dignity and they should be able to decide when and how they die, and potentially save their loved ones the pain of seeing them suffer.

Some also believe death is private, and its not the states place to interfere if a person wants to die.

Meanwhile, those in favour of euthanasia also point out that we euthanise our pets as an act of kindness and resources could be put towards people who want to live, or whose conditions are curable.

However, there are concerns that allowing euthanasia would give doctors too much power, and might even worsencare for the terminally ill and research into their illnesses.

Some also believe it goes against the job description of doctors and nurses and undermines the value of human life.

Others also worry about the possibility of someone potentially recovering, or changing their mind when its already too late. Some have even suggestedit could lead to people feeling pressured into asking to die, as they dont want to be a burden upon those around them.

Many religious people are opposed to euthanasia and assisted dying too, as they believe God decides when we die.

Right now, despite fierce campaigning from organisations such as Dignity in Dying, the law is showing no signs of changing in the UK.

In September 2015MPs debated the issue for the first time in almost 20 years but the Assisted Dying Bill was rejected by 330 votes to 118, leading to reformers branding MPs ridiculously out of touch.

Motor neurone disease sufferer Noel Conway is one of the latest to try and challenge UK law on assisted dying.

The retired college lecturer took his case to the Court of Appeal after he was refused permission to bring a judicial review over the blanket ban on providing a person with assistance to die.

His lawyers said when he has less than six months to live and retains the mental capacity to make the decision, he would wish to be able to enlist assistance to bring about a peaceful and dignified death.

He claims the Suicide Act 1961 is incompatible with Article 8, which relates to respect for private and family life, and Article 14, which protects from discrimination.

Sun columnist Lorraine Kelly agreed, saying it was cruel for the state to deny him a peaceful death.

Lord Justice McFarlane and Lord Justice Beatsondecided in his favour on April 12, 2017, granting him the right to bring a High Court legal challenge.

Earlier this year a Belgian Paralympian caused controversy when she told reporters in Rioshe signed euthanasia papers in 2008 but is not ready to go through with it yet.

Marieke Vervoort, 37,suffers from an incurable degenerative muscle disease andpicked up the silver medal in the 400m T52 final.

Getty Images

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Euthanasia: Too soon? Not soon enough? – dvm360

Posted: at 12:14 am

Hospice and euthanasia are all about timing. Dr. Mary Gardner offers to guide clients through the process of their final gift to their petsaying goodbye.

You've seen the seemingly happy hospice dog bound into your clinic, and you're surprised when the client says, "We're ready to say goodbye." The part you missed: the pooch's frantic pacing and whining at 2 a.m. You've seen the obviously painful pet that needs to be let gobut the pet parents have their denial goggles firmly in place. How do you answer these tough situations when the pet and the pet parent are both feeling pain?

First, offer education. The veterinary team is in a perfect position to help families whose pets have entered hospice, says CVC educator Mary Gardner, DVM. You have to make sure you educate the owner about the disease the pet is facing and the progress that the disease is going to present to the family and to the pet. And you must make sure that they have all of their questions answered," she says.

Next, offer nonjudgmental support. What does that look and sound like? Dr. Gardner explains here:

"Once a pet is in hospice let the family know that at any time during this phase when they're ready to say goodbye you support that decision," Dr. Gardner says. "Because when their Lab was up at 2 o'clock in the morning pacing and panting and they call you at 8 a.m., they dont really want to be judged that they had a really bad night and tonight's the night [to euthanize the pet]. That Lab may come in to your clinic looking kind of good, but you weren't there all day. So make sure you understand what the family is going through, because the family may be suffering even if the pet is not."

Remember clients are experiencing an emotional, stressful decision. Answer their questions and give them the tools they need to make the best decisions. Then support them through the whole process.

Finally, advocate the pet's perspective with quality-of-life exercises.

"I've often helped families where I look at the pet and I think, 'Oh my goodness, this pet is suffering, and we need to intervene.' But I'll have one or more family members who aren't ready and they may not be seeing what I'm seeing. And I call that denial goggles," Dr. Gardner says. "I think we can all appreciate as pet parents, you don't ever want to say goodbye. And I understand when pet owners put those goggles on."

So when you see a pet not doing well and you need to help the family, Dr. Gardner suggests doing quality-of-life scales with the owner. "Don't just tell them, 'You'll know when it's time,' or 'Call me when they give you that look,'" she says. "And don't say, 'Call me when he stops eating.' Because we all know that 70-pound Lab that has arthritis is still going to eat till the very end and still wag his tail."

She says the goal is to give pet owners many different tools they can use, and there are many quality-of-life scales available. (For example, Dr. Alice Villalobos' Quality of Life Scale, this client handout from the Argus Institute or the coin jar exercise.) The critical point: Do them with the owner. Because sometimes pet owners may cheat a little bit and give their pets a better score than reality.

And if the pet parents still aren't ready, Dr. Gardner suggests talking about euthanasia. Many pet owners don't even know the process, and they may think it's painful. Or maybe they had a bad experience before and they're nervous about this time.

"So if you explain up front about when to say goodbye and how they can make that appointmentso it doesn't need to be scary, then maybe they'll be a little bit more comfortable when that decision needs to be made," she says.

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Euthanasia: Too soon? Not soon enough? - dvm360

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Bhatia Hospital death puts spotlight on euthanasia law – The Hindu – The Hindu

Posted: at 12:14 am

Bhatia Hospital death puts spotlight on euthanasia law - The Hindu
The Hindu
Mumbai: On March 31, 67-year-old Ramesh Nathwani died at Tardeo's Bhatia Hospital following a cardiac arrest. He was in the hospital's intensive care unit ...

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Bhatia Hospital death puts spotlight on euthanasia law - The Hindu - The Hindu

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What is euthanasia and assisted suicide and what is the law in the UK? – The Sun

Posted: April 12, 2017 at 9:09 am

Euthanasia and assisted dying is a controversialissue, with passionate campaigners on each side of the argument

THE debate around euthanasia and assisted dying in the UK is a controversial and complicated one.

Some say choosing when to die is to die with dignity, while others say it undermines the value of human life.

Getty Images

So what is euthanasia and assisted suicide and what is the debate surrounding this issue?

The Sun is here to explain the details surrounding this sensitive and divisive subject.

Euthanasia, sometimes known as mercy killing, is the practice of intentionally ending someones life to relieve their pain and suffering.

Assistedsuicide is deliberately helping or encouraging someone to take their own life, for example by providingthem with medicine to do so.

The term comes from an ancient Greek phrase meaning good death.

Both are illegal in the UK with euthanasia carrying a maximum penalty of life in jail, and assisted suicide 14 years. The only exception is passive euthanasia, which is where treatment that might extend someones life is withdrawn such as a life machine being turned off.

The only alternatives for terminally ill patients in the UK arehospice care or refusing treatment, which mentally capable patientshave the right to do.

As a result, some terminally ill people decide to travel abroad to die.In Switzerland, where assisted suicide is legal (but euthanasia is not), you do not have to be a Swiss citizen to use a clinic.However, it is not cheap assisted suicide non-profit Dignitas charges patients 3,380 for its services.

Reuters

Euthanasia anddying is a controversialissue with passionate campaigners on each side of the argument.

People who agree with euthanasia often argue that people should be allowed to die with dignity and they should be able to decide when and how they die, and potentially save their loved ones the pain of seeing them suffer.

Some also believe death is private, and its not the states place to interfere if a person wants to die.

Meanwhile, those in favour of euthanasia also point out that we euthanise our pets as an act of kindness and resources could be put towards people who want to live, or whose conditions are curable.

However, there are concerns that allowing euthanasia would give doctors too much power, and might even worsencare for the terminally ill and research into their illnesses.

Some also believe it goes against the job description of doctors and nurses and undermines the value of human life.

Others also worry about the possibility of someone potentially recovering, or changing their mind when its already too late. Some have even suggestedit could lead to people feeling pressured into asking to die, as they dont want to be a burden upon those around them.

Many religious people are opposed to euthanasia and assisted dying too, as they believe God decides when we die.

Right now, despite fierce campaigning from organisations such as Dignity in Dying, the law is showing no signs of changing in the UK.

In September 2015MPs debated the issue for the first time in almost 20 years but the Assisted Dying Bill was rejected by 330 votes to 118, leading to reformers branding MPs ridiculously out of touch.

Motor neurone disease sufferer Noel Conway is one of the latest to try and challenge UK law on assisted dying.

The retired college lecturer took his case to the Court of Appeal after he was refused permission to bring a judicial review over the blanket ban on providing a person with assistance to die.

His lawyers said when he has less than six months to live and retains the mental capacity to make the decision, he would wish to be able to enlist assistance to bring about a peaceful and dignified death.

He claims the Suicide Act 1961 is incompatible with Article 8, which relates to respect for private and family life, and Article 14, which protects from discrimination.

Sun columnist Lorraine Kelly agreed, saying it was cruel for the state to deny him a peaceful death.

Lord Justice McFarlane and Lord Justice Beatsondecided in his favour on April 12, 2017, granting him the right to bring a High Court legal challenge.

Earlier this year a Belgian Paralympian caused controversy when she told reporters in Rioshe signed euthanasia papers in 2008 but is not ready to go through with it yet.

Marieke Vervoort, 37,suffers from an incurable degenerative muscle disease andpicked up the silver medal in the 400m T52 final.

Getty Images

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What is euthanasia and assisted suicide and what is the law in the UK? - The Sun

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Stockpeople can benefit from protocols for pig euthanasia – Pig Progress (registration) (blog)

Posted: at 9:09 am

Pig euthanasia is not an easy process and both the decision-making process as well as the act itself can adversely affect stockpeople. Implementing practical and humane protocols can help.

This was the key message of a recent publication by Australian researchers in the Journal of Animal Science.

The researchers wrote that, however much euthanasia is a necessary act for any facility keeping live animals, the crucial role and responsibility of the stockperson in deciding and conducting on-farm euthanasia has been overlooked.

Stockperson characteristics and knowledge that lead to appropriate decision-making and the skills to competently perform the procedure remain to be identified, the researchers wrote.

They wrote, An important component of the stockpersons characteristics that predict behaviour is the stockpersons attitudes. This preliminary study investigated the factors that influence stockperson attitudes toward the practice of on-farm euthanasia in the pork industry.

The article described how 120 stockpeople from 10 Australian pig farms (ranging in size from 50 to 4,754 sows and from 2 to 32 employees) completed a questionnaire based on focus group input to assess their attitudes toward euthanasia and decision processes.

Factors identified included stockperson attitudes and attributes (empathy affect, empathy attribution, feeling bad about euthanising, and negative attitudes to pigs), beliefs about the working environment (perceived time constraints and relying on others), and factors related to decision-making (comfortable with euthanasia, trouble deciding and avoid if possible, confidence, insufficient knowledge, seeking knowledge, and using sources to get advice).

A finisher pig suffering from lung problems. Photo: Jong & Van Es

The researchers wrote that they found numerous significant correlations between these variables. Furthermore, regression analyses showed confidence as the only significant predictor of being comfortable with euthanasia (12.5% of the variance); insufficient knowledge and empathy attribution both as predictors of trouble deciding and avoid if possible (15.1% of the variance); and empathy affect, insufficient knowledge, and perceived time constraints as predictors of feeling bad about euthanising (23.2% of the variance).

They continued writing that stockpeople reported seeking more knowledge if they had not euthanised an animal before working with pigs, and women reported greater difficulty than men in conducting euthanasia.

The findings indicate that euthanasia, which comprises both a decision-making process and the act itself, can adversely affect stockpeople. The researchers concluded that this preliminary study offers insights for implementation of successful practical and humane pig euthanasia protocols on farm. This will benefit stockperson well-being and animal well-being alike.

The article was written by J.-L. Rault and G. Coleman, attached to the University of Melbourne, Australia; and by T. Holyoake of Holyoake Veterinary Consulting, Strathfieldsaye, Victoria, Australia.

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Q&A: 81-year-old audience member calls euthanasia arguments ‘bullshit’ – The Guardian

Posted: at 9:09 am

Leaning forward in her seat, 81-year-old Patricia Fellows stared down the slippery-slope and public morality arguments standing in the way of her deciding her own mode of death, and declared them bullshit.

Her target was Margaret Somerville, professor of bioethics at the University of Notre Dame, who had on Mondays Q&A panel defended her opposition to euthanasia in response to a question from Fellows husband, Ron.

Ron Fellows had explained that he was 90 and had no intention of going into an aged-care facility. Instead, if there came a time that he and his wife could no longer care for themselves and each other, they would take their own lives.

That, Somerville said, was a step beyond using euthanasia for the relief of terminal, intractable suffering, which she also opposed, and showed that laws allowing medically induced death, however narrow in their original construction, would always be nudged wider.

Your death affects your family, it affects your community, and ultimately what were doing as a society is changing the law to allow this type of, putting it bluntly, killing, then it is a seismic shift in our values as a society, she said.

Patricia Fellows offered an acerbic reply.

It is not about killing anyone, she said. We will be doing it ourselves. Im not asking Ron to kill me. I will do it myself and Ron will do it himself. I dont know what youre on about, darling, about killing. that is definitely the wrong word to be using.

Somerville interjected. It is still killing yourself.

Fellows responded: But its up to me. And its got nothing to do with the community, darling, she said, drawing out the vowels to show the word was not being used as an endearment, its to do with our family.

How you die does have to do with the community, Sommerville said.

Bullshit, said Fellows.

The Fellowses represented a growing, overlooked group of older Australians who were driven to suicide by the lack of any legal, less traumatic alternatives, the author Nikki Gemmell said.

Gemmell, one of five other panellists, wrote a book on the subject after her mother killed herself in secret to prevent any of her children being embroiled in a police investigation.

She died a very bleak and lonely and desolate death, without any love and without her family around her, because she was trying to protect us, Gemmell said.

Gemmell said she had since heard stories of elderly people killing themselves or attempting to in the most brutal and traumatic fashion because they felt they had no other option.

The communications minister Mitch Fifield, whose home state of Victoria will vote on euthanasia laws this year, said he did not support legalising euthanasia, adding that like most people his views were shaped by the deaths of his parents.

In each case their deaths were hastened by good palliative care, he said. There are situations where there are legitimate care options which are presented and a byproduct of some of those can be that death comes forward sometimes theres a good thing when there is space in the law that allows families, that allows doctors, that allows patients to manage their situation.

That type of palliative care response, known in common law as the doctrine of double effect, would be clarified and codified under changes to the Victorian palliative care system introduced alongside voluntary assisted dying laws, according to a report released last year.

The Labor senator Penny Wong and the British musician Billy Bragg both said they supported properly controlled voluntary euthanasia.

Wong and Bragg also found common ground on housing affordability, sparked by news that house prices in Sydney had risen almost 20% in the past 12 months.

Wong, dismissing Fifields objections that the housing affordability debate should focus on housing supply, land availability and residential zoning, said changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax, both Labor policies vehemently opposed by the Liberals, must be included in any serious housing affordability policy.

The government never answers: why should someone buying their seventh house have more tax incentives that someone buying their first? Wong said.

Fifield did not answer, requesting the audience instead wait until the release of the federal budget.

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Ontario’s euthanasia bill – CHCH – CHCH News

Posted: at 9:09 am

Posted: April 10, 2017 10:28:40 PM Category: Ontario Tags: assisted dying, Bill 84, doctors, queen's park

Doctors who are outraged by the Ontario Liberals plan for physician assisted suicide spoke at Queens Park Monday to express their concerns. The doctors claim they are forced to give a referral even if theyre morally opposed to assisted dying.

The organization looking out for Ontario doctors and the college regulating them have differing opinions when it comes to opposing medical assistance in dying. Doctors speaking out say they shouldnt be forced to refer their patients to another doctor who is willing to help them die if they disagree with the practice.

None of us ever envisioned whether we took our hippocratic oath 40 years ago or 4 years ago that we would one day be legislated to cooperate in the death of our patients.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons changed its human rights policy in 2015 to force doctors to provide a referral. Medical ethicist Kerry Bowman understands the moral dilemma for doctors but says patients who are dying are vulnerable and need help. But the doctors say that goes against their own constitutional rights.

Doctors who refuse to refer patients for services on religious and moral grounds, including abortions or assisted dying, could face discipline under the colleges policy. The province says the legislation on assisted dying, Bill 84, wont force a doctor to end someones life if they choose not to.

According to the ministers office, 365 Ontarians chose to end their lives with medical help between June of last year when it became legal and March 30th.

Amendments to the bill have been brought forward by MPPs to protect doctors from any disciplinary measures if they refuse to refer a patient for assisted dying. A committee looking at the changes will meet Tuesday to discuss these potential amendments.

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Ontario's euthanasia bill - CHCH - CHCH News

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