Santa Cruz Sentinel

Lawsuit briefly blocking assisted death law ends

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> An appeals court has formally ended a lawsuit that in 2018 temporaril­y suspended a California law that allows adults to obtain prescripti­ons for life ending drugs, a gap that advocates blamed Thursday for a significan­t drop in its use that year.

California lawmakers made the lawsuit moot last month when they reauthoriz­ed and extended the law until 2031 while reducing the time until terminal patients projected to have six months or less to live can choose to be given fatal drugs.

The 452 terminally ill California­ns who received prescripti­ons in 2018 was down 22% from the previous year, when 577 people received the lethal drugs, before increasing to 618 who obtained the drugs in 2019.

Last year, 667 people obtained prescripti­ons. In each year, not everyone who received the drugs used them to end their lives.

Compassion & Choices, a national organizati­on that advocated for the law, blamed the drop three years ago on a Riverside County judge’s ruling in May 2018 that state legislator­s acted

unconstitu­tionally when they passed the law during a special session that was devoted to health care in 2016.

Superior Court Judge

Daniel Ottolia’s suspension was in place about three weeks before an appeals court reinstated the law.

But the advocacy group said at the time that the ruling interrupte­d the plans of about 200 patients who had already started the process, while causing confusion and fear among both doctors and patients about violating the law.

A different Riverside County judge last year ruled that lawmakers in fact did act properly and that physicians who sued to block it lacked legal standing to file the challenge. But the court allowed the opponents to refile their complaint if they could find patients to join the lawsuit.

Late last week the two sides agreed that the Legislatur­e’s recent reauthoriz­ation and extension of the law, which had been set to sunset in another five years, effectivel­y ended the legal challenge. The 4th Appellate District Court of Appeal accepted the parties’ stipulatio­n in a one-paragraph order Monday, without comment.

Starting January 1 under the reauthoriz­ed law, the waiting period required between the time a patient makes separate oral requests for medication will drop to 48 hours, down from the current minimum 15 days.

The revised law also eliminates the requiremen­t that patients make final written attestatio­ns within 48 hours of taking the medication.

The Life Legal Defense Foundation, which represente­d opponents in the lawsuit, did not immediatel­y comment Thursday.

“We always believed the California legislatur­e lawfully passed the End of Life Option Act during a special session on healthcare because medical aid in dying is a palliative care option to relieve intolerabl­e suffering,” Compassion & Choices chief legal advocacy officer Kevin Díaz said in a statement. “But thanks to the Legislatur­e reauthoriz­ing the law this year during a regular session, it doesn’t matter anymore.”

California is one of 10 states and Washington, D.C. that allow medical aid in dying. The others are Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont and Washington state.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Debbie Ziegler holds a photo of her daughter, Brittany Maynard, the California woman with brain cancer who moved to Oregon to legally end her life, during a news conference in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Debbie Ziegler holds a photo of her daughter, Brittany Maynard, the California woman with brain cancer who moved to Oregon to legally end her life, during a news conference in Sacramento.

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