... open euthanasia to children and to persons with dementia ?
Posted on 2017/06/06 at 11h11
Anita Cameron Activist "Not dead Yet"
This article was published on the Not Dead Yet website on June 4, 2017.
Anita Cameron, is a leader of the prominent disability rights group Not Dead Yet...
read « 5 Mistaken Reasons Why People Want Assisted Suicide »
Posted on 2017/03/15 at 6h26
Mark Komrad Psychiatrist and Ethicist
The issue of physician assisted suicide is one that has been debated both in the medical community and in the general population. Recent law changes by some European countries have brought the issue to the forefront perhaps more than ever before. -
Mark S. Komrad, MD, Ethicist in Residence for the Sheppard Pratt Health System in Baltimore discussed these changes during the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association in Atlanta. Countries like Belgium and the Netherlands have been at the forefront of these changes over the past decade, allowing mental illness access to this procedure moving beyond terminally ill patients who were the only ones who qualified up until this point. - See more HER...
read « Changing Landscape of Physician Assisted Suicide »
Posted on 2017/03/07 at 7h44
Bernard MICHELET Consultant
In Belgium we have nearly 15 years of experience in euthanasia and so – very unfortunately - we are now a kind of "world authority" on this terrible matter.
I would like to bring 3 points to the reader's attention...
read « 15 years of experience in euthanasia... »
Posted on 2017/01/12 at 3h04
In the Press Journalist
Vidéos : "Affirming dignity:"
A humane society cares for its sick and old. What does this look like and what role should law and policy play in shaping a culture that values all life? What does 'dying with dignity' really mean? In Belgium and the Netherlands, the phrase has become a synonym for euthanasia. In countries where euthanasia is legalized, it is done not only in cases of terminal illness, but also in non-terminal situations and for psychological suffering, such as depression. Euthanasia without an age limit is legal in Belgium, and has been legalized for minors over 12 years of age in the Netherlands...
read « Affirming Dignity »
Posted on 2016/03/09 at 11h18
Paul RUSSEL N/C
For those tempted to the thought that a euthanasia or assisted suicide law, once passed, is cast in stone, never to be changed, recent events in Belgium should make you think again.
Not only has the statute been subject to continual re-interpretation to the point where euthanasia for psychological reasons is now taking place, the parliament has also debated and passed an amendment to the 2002 law only two years ago that removed the lower age limit to now include children. In light of further and more recent events, it seems that change may be just around the corner once again...
read « Crushing resistance - one clause at a time »
Posted on 2015/07/03 at 5h16
Clive PARKER N/C
Dear Sir or Madam,
I am writing in response to a newspaper article regarding the young woman (24) named Laura...
read « Clive wants to talk to LAURA ! »
Posted on 2014/04/10 at 7h36
Margareth Somerville Prof. et Bioéthicienne
Advocates of legalizing euthanasia reject "slippery slope" arguments as unfounded fear-mongering and claim that its use will always be restricted to rare cases of dying people with unrelievable, unbearable suffering. But, as the Netherlands and Belgium demonstrate, that's not what results, in practice.
The logical and practical slippery slopes are unavoidable and inevitable, because those consequences are built into the act of legalization through its justification of inflicting death. Once we cross the clear line that we must not intentionally kill another person, there's no logical stopping point...
read « Why euthanasia slippery slopes can't be prevented »