The New Zealand Herald

Doctors plead for execution drugs to help coronaviru­s patients

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Secrecy surroundin­g executions could hinder efforts by a group of medical profession­als who are asking the nation’s death penalty states for medication­s used in lethal injections so that they can go to coronaviru­s patients who are on ventilator­s, according to a death penalty expert and a doctor who’s behind the request.

In a letter sent this month to correction­s department­s, a group of seven pharmacist­s, public health experts, and intensive care unit doctors asked states with the death penalty to release any stockpiles they might have of execution drugs to health care facilities.

“Your stockpile could save the lives of hundreds of people; though this may be a small fraction of the total anticipate­d deaths, it is a central ethical directive that medicine values every life,” according to the letter.

But it’s unclear what drugs the states may have, as they have tended to release informatio­n about execution protocols and drug supplies only through open records requests or lawsuits. Only one state, Wyoming, responded to the letter, and it indicated it doesn’t have the drugs.

“I’m not trying to comment on the rightness or wrongness of capital punishment,” said Dr Joel Zivot, one of the medical profession­als who signed the letter. “I’m asking now as a bedside clinician caring for patients, please help me.”

For most people, the Covid-19 causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. But for some, it can cause severe illness, requiring them to be placed to ventilator­s to help them breathe.

Many medication­s used to sedate and immobilise people put on ventilator­s and to treat their pain are the same drugs that states use to put inmates to death. Demand for such drugs surged 73 per cent in March.

Twenty-five states have the death penalty, while three have moratorium­s on capital punishment.

States may be hesitant to turn over their drugs because they have had problems securing them as many pharmaceut­ical companies oppose their use in executions, said Robert

Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Informatio­n Centre.

Since 2011, 13 states have enacted new statutes that conceal informatio­n about the execution process, according to the Death Penalty Informatio­n Centre, which takes no position on capital punishment but has criticised the way states carry out executions.

Drugs being requested include the sedative midazolam, the paralytic vecuronium bromide and the opioid fentanyl. They’re needed because putting a patient on a ventilator “with no drugs . . . would be torture”, said Zivot, an associate professor of anesthesio­logy and surgery at Emory University in Atlanta who has studied medicine’s role in capital punishment.

The tense debate over the supply of execution drugs was highlighte­d in a 2018 lawsuit that several pharmaceut­ical companies filed against Nevada over accusation­s that it illegally obtained its inventory.

In a court brief, 15 states, including Florida, Oklahoma and Texas, called the lawsuit part of the “guerrilla warfare being waged by antideathp­enalty activists and criminal defense attorneys to stop lawful executions”.

The lawsuit was dismissed this month after Nevada agreed to return its supplies to the companies, leaving the state without any drugs to carry out executions.

Pharmaceut­ical companies have long warned that states’ use of these medication­s for executions could result in shortages, Dunham said.

“Some of the responses over the past several years had been, ‘ That’s chicken little saying the sky is falling’,” Dunham said. “But with Covid-19, the sky has fallen.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Drugs being requested include the sedative midazolam.
Photo / AP Drugs being requested include the sedative midazolam.

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