Life, Law, and SuicideNEW YORK TASK FORCE ON LIFE AND THE LAWThis is a clear summary of the dangers involved in the legalization of assisted suicide.
The Ninth and Second Circuits (whose decisions were heard by the U.S.
Supreme Court last year) both dismissed the risks associated with legalizing physician-assisted
suicide as insubstantial, and claimed that, to the extent risks exist, they can
effectively be eliminated through state law or regulation. Our concerns about
the risks of legalizing assisted suicide are set forth in detail in “When Death
is Sought,” and will not be restated in depth here. We take this opportunity,
however, to outline briefly the primary risks associated with legalization: Undiagnosed
or untreated mental illness. Many individuals who contemplate suicide
including those who are terminally ill suffer from treatable mental
disorders, most commonly depression. Yet physicians routinely fail to diagnose
and treat these disorders, particularly among patients at the end of life... If
assisted suicide is legalized, many requests based on mental illness are likely
to be granted, even though they do not reflect a competent, settled decision to
die. Improperly managed physical symptoms.
Requests for assisted suicide are also highly correlated with unrelieved pain
and other discomfort associated with physical illness. Despite significant advances
in palliative care, the pain and discomfort that accompany many physical illnesses
are often grossly under treated in current clinical practice. If assisted suicide
is legalized, physicians are likely to grant requests for assisted suicide from
patients in pain before all available options to relieve the patient's pain have
thoroughly been explored. Insufficient attention to
the suffering and fears of dying patients. For some individuals with
terminal or incurable diseases, suicide may appear to be the only solution to
profound existential suffering, feelings of abandonment, or fears about the process
of dying. While the provision of psychological, spiritual, and social supports
particularly, comprehensive hospice services can often address these
concerns, many individuals do not receive these interventions. If physician-assisted
suicide is legalized, many individuals are likely to seek the option because their
suffering and fears have not adequately been addressed. Vulnerability
of socially marginalized groups. No matter how carefully any guidelines
for physician-assisted suicide are framed, the practice will be implemented through
the prism of social inequality and bias that characterizes the delivery of services
in all segments of our society, including health care. The practices will pose
the greatest risks to those who are poor, elderly, isolated, members of a minority
group, or who lack access to good medical care. Devaluation
of the lives of the disabled. A physician's reaction to a patient's
request for suicide assistance is likely to depend heavily on the physician's
perception of the patient's quality of life. Physicians, like the rest of society,
may often devalue the quality of life of individuals with disabilities, and may
therefore be particularly inclined to grant requests for suicide assistance from
disabled patients. Sense of obligation. The
legalization of assisted suicide would itself send a message that suicide is a
socially acceptable response to terminal or incurable disease. Some patients are
likely to feel pressured to take this option, particularly those who feel obligated
to relieve their loved ones of the burden of care. Those patients who do not want
to commit suicide may feel obligated to justify their decision to continue living.
Patient deference to physician recommendations.
Physicians typically make recommendations about treatment options, and patients
generally do what physicians recommend. Once a physician states or implies that
assisted suicide would he “medically appropriate,” some patients will feel that
they have few, if any, alternatives but to accept the recommendation. Increasing
financial incentives to limit care. Physician-assisted suicide is far
less expensive than palliative and supportive care at the end of life. As medical
care shifts to a system of capitation, financial incentives to limit treatment
may influence the way that the option of physician-assisted suicide is presented
to patients, as well as the range of alternatives patients are able to obtain.
Arbitrariness of proposed limits. Once
society authorizes physician-assisted suicide for competent, terminally ill patients
experiencing unrelievable suffering, it will be difficult, if not impossible,
to contain the option to such a limited group. Individuals who are not competent,
who are not terminally ill, or who cannot self-administer lethal drugs will also
seek the option of physician-assisted death, and no principled basis will exist
to deny them this right. Impossibility of developing
effective regulation. The clinical safeguards that have been proposed
to prevent abuse and errors are unlikely to be realized in everyday medical practice.
Moreover, the private nature of these decisions would undermine efforts to monitor
physicians behavior to prevent mistakes and abuse. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT New
York State Task Force on Life and the Law. “Life, Law, and Suicide.” First
Things 85 (August/September 1998): 45-46. Reprinted with permission of
First Things, published by the Institute on Religion and Public Life, 156
Fifth Avenue, Suite 400, New York, NY 10010. To subscribe to First Things
call 1-800-783-4903. THE AUTHOR New York
State Task Force on Life and the Law. Copyright © 1998 FIRST
THINGS
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