Lord Falconer has drawn second place in the Ballot to present an ‘Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Bill’. The advocates of assisted suicide are once again bringing the debate back to Parliament.
Their attempts have failed many times in the past.
Yet the Anscombe Bioethics Centre urges those in favour or undecided to reconsider the issue, in light of the devastating consequences in jurisdictions that have already legalised it.
As Prof. David Albert Jones points out in a new article, legalising assisted suicide poses a threat to the most vulnerable in our society.
He writes: ‘Legalising assisted suicide would place an extra burden on sick and disabled people by forcing them to ask if they are a burden to others. In Oregon, the number seeking death in part because they feel a burden to others has increased significantly over time (up to 54.2% in 2021). In Canada in 2022, 4,625 people (35.3%) had their lives ended because they felt they were a burden to others.’
Evidence from Oregon also shows that even if it were restricted to terminal illnesses only, there is a high probability of going down a dangerously slippery slope. In Oregon the eligibility criteria has been effectively expanded to include those suffering from chronic (but not terminal) illnesses.
Liam McArthur MSP has also proposed legalising assisted suicide in Scotland. The Health, Sport and Social Care Committee of the Scottish Parliament has called for evidence on his ‘Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill’.
As Prof. Jones writes, ‘The Anscombe Bioethics Centre is encouraging responses to the Health, Sport and Social Care Committee from anyone with concerns about the Bill.’
Legalisation of assisted suicide is neither inevitable, nor a sign of progress. Suicide should be prevented where possible, not aided and abetted.
We should support those who feel they are a burden to others, not help them to kill themselves.
All those concerned for the protection of the most vulnerable in our society must make their voices heard.
‘Do we want people who feel they are a burden to others to take their own lives?’
Peter D. Williams
Peter D. Williams is the Media & Communications Advisor to the Anscombe Bioethics Centre.