The Free Press Journal

Britain makes it easy for ‘vegetating’ patients to die

Top court upholds UK High Court ruling of allowing vegetative state patients to die if families, medical experts agree

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In a landmark judgement, the UK Supreme Court on Monday ruled legal permission will no longer be required to end care for patients in a long-term permanent vegetative state.

The ruling makes it easier to withdraw food and liquid to allow such patients to die when families and doctors are in agreement. Medical staff will now be able to remove feeding tubes in such cases without having to apply to the Court of Protection, under previous laws.

Currently, both euthanasia and assisted suicide are illegal in the UK with the only exception “passive euthanasia” — when treatment that might extend someone’s life is withdrawn.

Lady Black, heading a fivejudge bench, said an agreement between families and doctors was sufficient safeguard to ensure “public confidence”. “Having looked at the issue in its wider context as well as from a narrower legal perspectiv­e, I do not consider that it has been establishe­d that the common law or the ECHR (European Convention on Human Rights), in combinatio­n or separately, give rise to the mandatory requiremen­t to involve the court to decide upon the best interests of every patient,” Lady Black said as part of the unanimous ruling of five Supreme Court justices.

However, she urged families to apply to court “where there are difference­s of view” between relatives or medical profession­als.

The ruling by the UK’s apex court upholds a judgement on the end-of-life decision-making of a man with extensive brain injury. The 52-year-old man, identified as Mr Y, had been in a vegetative state since June 2017. Experts said it was improbable he would ever regain consciousn­ess and agreed with family members’ decision to withdraw hydration and nutrition — something which usually needs approval from the Court of Protection. His family and doctors agreed it would be in his best interests to allow him to die by withdrawin­g feeding tube. The NHS trust asked UK HC to declare it was not necessary to apply to the Court of Protection for a decision when doctors and family believe it is in the patient’s interests.

The judge agreed, but the Official Solicitor — who represents people who lack capacity — appealed on behalf of Mr Y. That appeal was dismissed by the SC on Monday, setting a legal precedent.

 ??  ?? Currently, both euthanasia and assisted suicide are illegal in the UK with the only exception “passive euthanasia” — when treatment that might extend someone’s life is withdrawn
Currently, both euthanasia and assisted suicide are illegal in the UK with the only exception “passive euthanasia” — when treatment that might extend someone’s life is withdrawn

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