The Timaru Herald

Don’t be so sure, Maryan

-

only, and making it conditiona­l on a public referendum. But it is wrong and misleading to say, as Street does, that his report is ‘‘making some critical amendments’’, as though these have been accepted. They are simply Seymour’s ideas; only Parliament can change the bill now.

Third, MPs will be looking at how similar laws have worked overseas. In Oregon, which legalised assisted suicide for terminal illness, 55 per cent of patients accessing assisted suicide said one of their reasons was fear ‘‘of being a burden on family, friends and caregivers’’. This number has been rising steadily, and it should be a concern for a law supposed to be based on free choice.

This kind of law can also expand. In Belgium, euthanasia was originally limited to adults, but was extended to children in 2014, with some limitation­s. The numbers accessing assisted suicide have also grown steadily in places such as Washington state, with 196 deaths in 2017 compared with 64 in 2009. Street herself notes how disappoint­ed she will be if ‘‘grievous and irremediab­le’’ medical conditions are no longer eligible for euthanasia and assisted suicide, and if a limited version of the bill is passed it would be surprising if pro-euthanasia campaigner­s didn’t try to expand the eligibilit­y criteria in future.

There’s much more detail about the evidence, and analysis of the bill, in our submission; in summary, it shows that vulnerable people are at an unacceptab­le risk of wrongful death under laws such as these.

Lastly, MPs will probably ask themselves what voters think, and realise there is significan­t public opposition to the bill. While Street mentions that more than 35,000 people made written submission­s on the bill, she doesn’t mention reports suggesting that the vast majority of submitters opposed the bill; unofficial estimates put it as high as 90 per cent.

While opinion polls consistent­ly find a majority of the public supports euthanasia and assisted suicide, it’s odd not to mention submitters’ opposition, especially as submitters have specifical­ly considered this bill and have probably thought about the issue more deeply than someone put on the spot by a polling company’s random call.

It’s only human for our prediction­s to be coloured by our desires and, as president of the End-of-Life Choice Society, it’s perhaps not surprising that Street’s crystal ball appears to have given her the answer she wanted.

But legalising euthanasia and assisted suicide is one of the most consequent­ial issues that Parliament will consider this year, and a bit less crystal ballgazing and a bit more attention to the facts would do us all a favour.

‘‘Vulnerable people are at an unacceptab­le risk of wrongful death under laws such as these.’’

 ?? ROSS GIBLIN/STUFF ?? Maryan Street predicted last week that passage of David Seymour’s euthanasia bill was inevitable.
ROSS GIBLIN/STUFF Maryan Street predicted last week that passage of David Seymour’s euthanasia bill was inevitable.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand