Las Vegas Review-Journal

Belgium probes euthanasia case

Woman asked to die after autism diagnosis

- By Maria Cheng The Associated Press

LONDON — Belgian officials are investigat­ing whether doctors improperly euthanized a woman with autism, the first criminal investigat­ion in a euthanasia case since 2002, when the practice was legalized in the European nation.

Three doctors from East Flanders are being investigat­ed on suspicion of having “poisoned” Tine Nys, 38, in 2010. Nys had been diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, a mild form of autism, two months before she was euthanized by a doctor in an apparently legal killing that she had asked for.

Belgium is one of two countries, along with the Netherland­s, where the euthanasia of people for psychiatri­c reasons is allowed if they can prove they have “unbearable and untreatabl­e” suffering.

Many experts — in Belgium and beyond— dispute whether autism should be considered a valid reason to be a euthanasia candidate.

Last year, The Associated Press reported that after Nys’ family filed a criminal complaint, alleging numerous “irregulari­ties” in her death, her doctors attempted to block the investigat­ion.

“We must try to stop these people,” wrote Dr. Lieve Thienpont, the psychiatri­st who approved Nys’ request — and one of the doctors now facing charges. “It is a seriously dysfunctio­nal, wounded, traumatize­d family with very little empathy and respect for others.”

Belgium’s Chamber of Indictment “presumes that there are sufficient indication­s in this particular case,” and the doctors involved have been referred to the Court of Assize in Ghent. Belgium’s euthanasia commission had previously approved the case after Nys’ death and did not publicly cite any problems with it.

The doctors who granted Nys’ euthanasia will now face trial “due to poisoning,” said Francis Clarysse, a Ghent prosecutor. It is unclear when a trial might begin, and the doctors could still appeal the decision.

Sophie Nys, one of Tine’s sisters, told the AP that the doctor who performed the euthanasia asked her father to hold the needle in place while the doctor administer­ed the fatal injection, among other fumbling efforts. Afterward, the doctor asked the family to use a stethoscop­e to confirm that Tine’s heart had stopped.

Concerns have been raised in other cases about whether Thienpont too easily approved euthanasia requests from patients with mental illnesses. Some experts estimated that Thienpont has been involved in about a third of all euthanasia cases for psychiatri­c reasons in Belgium.

“I think this (trial) has symbolic importance in the sense that it sends doctors a message…that you could be accused of a very serious crime and prosecuted if you don’t comply with the legal requiremen­ts for euthanasia,” said Penney Lewis, a law professor at King’s College London.

 ??  ?? Dr. Lieve Thienpont
Dr. Lieve Thienpont

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