MPs are to debate whether some terminally ill people in England and Wales should be allowed to end their lives with medical supervision.
Under a proposed new law, patients with a clear desire to end their lives would be prescribed a lethal dose of drugs by two doctors, but only the patient would be allowed to take them.
The bill is being brought before the Commons by Labour MP Rob Marris.
The Archbishop of Canterbury is among those to have voiced opposition.
Lord Falconer put the first Assisted Dying Bill before the House of Lords, but it ran out of time before the 2015 general election.
Mr Marris, MP for Wolverhampton South West, won a private member’s bill ballot in June guaranteeing time in the chamber for the legislation.
He said it could give MPs the first vote on assisted dying since 1997.
Competent choice
Under Marris’s bill, two doctors and a High Court judge would have to agree to assisted dying for any patient. That means they would have to be satisfied that he or she was mentally competent, had less than six months to live and had been informed of all the alternatives.
The Bill would only permit the patient to administer the medication to end their own life – not a doctor – so it would not allow euthanasia.
Medical professionals would be entitled to refuse to be involved in the process.
The Bill would not allow a person with a non-terminal disability or with dementia to be assisted to die.
David Cameron has already indicated that he is not convinced that further steps need to be taken to change current laws.
Rob Marris said it was a simple question of offering “choice and dignity”.
“With appropriate, strong safeguards, terminally ill adults of sound mind should be legally allowed to choose to have assistance to end their own lives,” he said.
“The current legal position is a mess. At present the law denies dying people the choice of a safe, legal assisted death, whilst turning a blind eye to home suicides, and to technically illegal actions by doctors, and to Dignitas deaths.
“I am convinced that we can and should allow better choice for dying people.”
Euthanasia, which is considered as manslaughter or murder, is illegal under English law.
The Suicide Act 1961 makes it an offence to encourage or assist a suicide or a suicide attempt in England and Wales. Anyone doing so could face up to 14 years in prison.
The law is almost identical in Northern Ireland.
There is no specific law on assisted suicide in Scotland, creating some uncertainty, although in theory someone could be prosecuted under homicide legislation.
‘Dangerous’
Assisted dying is a contentious issue which divides opinion.
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, said this week that success for the bill would mean suicide was “actively supported” instead of being viewed as a tragedy.
He said asking doctors to help people to die would be “a change of monumental proportions both in the law and in the role of doctors”.
Respect for the lives of others goes to the heart of both our criminal and human rights law, the archbishop said, so the current laws should not be abandoned.
Other opponents of the Bill say it is open to abuse and would put pressure on vulnerable people to end their lives.
Alistair Thompson, from Care Not Killing, say the legislation is “dangerous” and urges MPs to reject it.
“Changing the law on assisted suicide, by discriminating against the terminally ill and disabled from the healthy and able-bodied sends out a chilling message about how we value and treat the most vulnerable people in society.”
‘Law working well’
He said the current law was working well and very few British people were travelling abroad to commit suicide or euthanasia.
“The current law exists to protect those who are sick, elderly, depressed or disabled from feeling obliged to end their lives.”
However, campaigners in favour of the Bill say it would lessen unnecessary suffering for dying people who want the choice to control how and when they die.
Campaign group Dignity in Dying said without a change in the law, terminally ill patients would continue to travel to Dignitas to die, end their lives themselves or be illegally helped to die by doctors.
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Source: BBC