The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Cancer fight over for right-to-die campaigner

Alison Napier told loved ones to ‘be sad but proud too’

- JAMIE BUCHAN

A Fife-born writer who fought for a change in law to allow terminally ill Scots the right to plan their own deaths has lost her battle with cancer.

Alison Napier, pictured, penned her own obituary and told friends: “Be sad for a while, but be proud too.”

The 61-year-old died after six days in a Tayside hospice. Her partner Susan Price, whom she married in May, believes Alison would have preferred to have died at home.

Alison had worked with campaign group Dignity in Dying and considered travelling to the Dignitas clinic in Switzerlan­d.

Susan said: “Alison’s desire was to have a good death, good for everyone around her.

“On many levels, it was a good death – but it went on for three days and that is a long time to have to witness that.”

Alison’s funeral – which she planned herself – takes place at Perth Crematoriu­m this afternoon.

A woman who campaigned for the right to die has lost her battle with cancer.

Alison Napier, 61, died in a local hospice, just weeks after she called for a change in law to allow terminally ill Scots the right to request a fatal prescripti­on.

Her partner Susan Price, whom she married in May, believes Alison’s death earlier this month was not as peaceful as she would have wanted.

“In the end, she almost made her death her life,” she said.

Alison, 61, wrote her own obituary, picked out a coffin and arranged plans for this afternoon’s funeral service at Perth Crematoriu­m.

She said in June: “I do not want people that I care about seeing someone that I am not. I do not want to become someone different after 60 years, in my last week.

“If that could be prevented, that would be such a relief, both for the person who is dying and the people who are left behind.”

Alison had also worked closely with campaign group Dignity in Dying, and had considered travelling to the Dignitas clinic in Switzerlan­d. However, the severity of her illness meant there simply was not enough time to process the paperwork.

Susan spoke highly of staff at Cornhill Macmillan Centre in Perth, where Alison spent her final six days.

“They were an amazing, fabulous bunch of people,” she said. “They do a world class job.

“I wasn’t there when Alison died, I couldn’t bear it,” she said. “I couldn’t bear to see her fighting for every breath.

“In the end, she did just drift off like she wanted, but it was perhaps not as peaceful as she would have liked.”

Alison, who was born in Fife and worked as a social worker for Perth and Kinross Council, was a passionate musician, reader and writer, with a novel shortliste­d for a Dundee Internatio­nal Book Prize and blogs that were read by thousands of people.

She wrote that she was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2016, and “the illness came back two years later” spreading to her lung and her brain.

In her obituary, which she wrote weeks before her death, she said: “(Alison) politely declined all the toxic and ultimately futile treatments on offer and opted instead for quality of life with Susan for her remaining months, palliative care with lots of meals out and time with friends and family.”

She wrote that she was described by those who followed her blogs as “inspiratio­nal, funny and brave”.

She said: “These are not descriptio­ns Alison would recognise. Aw man, she would say.

“But she has told me that hers was a life that she was proud to have lived, despite all its bumps and twists and turns. Full of people that she was enriched from knowing with Susan centre stage.”

Alison signs off: “She thanks you for sharing it with her – be sad for a while, but be proud too – you all made it what it was.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: Robert Perry. ?? Passionate musician, reader and writer Alison Napier spent her last few months with friends and family.
Picture: Robert Perry. Passionate musician, reader and writer Alison Napier spent her last few months with friends and family.
 ??  ?? Cornhill Macmillan Centre in Perth.
Cornhill Macmillan Centre in Perth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom