Assisted Suicide Bills Fail in Four States



Bills regarding assisted suicide were introduced in four states this year, galvanizing doctors on both sides of the issue to get involved in the law-making process.

Three of the bills (in Arizona, Hawaii and Vermont) called for legalizing the objectionable practice, while a North Carolina bill (introduced by two physician legislators) called for banning it.

“Nothing moved past the chamber of introduction,” said National Conference of State Legislatures policy associate Rachel Tanner. “There were a lot of bills introduced; none of them moved anywhere.”

In North Carolina, family practitioner and Republican state Sen. James Forrester, MD, said he had “worked his buns off” trying to get his anti-assisted suicide bill passed.

Dr. Forrester, who co-sponsored the bill with Democrat and retired pediatrician William Purcell, MD, said he thought there was wide support for the bill, but opposition is coming from an unexpected source: the local hospice in Raleigh, the state's capital city.

“It may be that I could get the bill passed without hospice support, but I don't want to do that,” he said, adding that his wife serves on the board of the local hospice in their hometown. “I'd like to get them involved and get something everyone can agree to.”

Ned Yellig, MD, medical director of the Hospice of Wake County in Raleigh, was heartened to hear his opposition has had an impact.

The bill “puts physicians who work with patients at the end of life at risk,” he said. “We are afraid that the physicians entrusted with making sure people die in comfort may be less aggressive with pain control or palliative sedation.”

Nancy Valko, a leading pro-life nurse who monitors end of life issues, said the North Carolina bill presented other concerns for the pro-life community.

“There were other concerns over the [North Carolina] assisted suicide bill including the original limiting of the ban to just healthcare providers (not relatives, the public, etc.) and the inclusion of several exceptions including advance directives (which could eventually include requests for assisted suicide),” Valko explained to the Pro-Life Infonet.

The bill was modified to cover some concerns brought up at a legislative hearing. It now includes calls for pain management and palliative care training at state medical schools, and calls on the North Carolina Institute of Medicine to study ways to prevent suicide.

“It's in its sixth version, and there will probably be a lot more before it's passed,” said Dr. Forrester, who introduced a similar bill in 2001. “This will probably be my last attempt.”

Retired family practitioner Carmer Van Buren, MD, however, is vowing to continue his push to make Vermont the second state in the nation to allow assisted suicide. “It will come up again next year, definitely, no doubt about it,” he said, adding that an education effort designed to increase public understanding of the bill is in the works.

Now 75, Van Buren said the time and issue are right for him to get politically active after having a clinical practice for 32 years and then serving in a medical administrative capacity for another 10. “This is my first foray into major political activity.”

(This article originally appeared in the AMA News. Reprinted here courtesy of Steven Ertelt and the Pro-Life Infonet email newsletter. For more information or to subscribe go to www.prolifeinfo.org or email infonet@prolifeinfo.org.)

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