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The End of Life Assistance (Scotland) Bill – Action for Scottish Supporters

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The End of Life Assistance (Scotland) Bill, which seeks to legalise both assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia in Scotland, has been rejected by the Committee scrutinising the Bill.

MSPs will now debate the Bill on 1 December with a vote later that evening. If voted out at that stage the Bill will be stopped. 

Please write to your MSP to encourage them to vote against the Bill. Please also pray that this Bill would fall.

Margo Macdonald MSP originally introduced the Bill with the intention of legalising so-called ‘assisted dying’ in Scotland but has faced widespread criticism over the scope, clarity and lack of safeguards in the proposed legislation. 

The rejection of the Bill by the Committee, which was established in February this year to consider the general principles of the Bill and report on them to the Scottish Parliament, is the latest step in a long-running saga. 

On 3 March 2010, the Committee launched a public call for evidence, inviting individuals and organisations to make written submissions with their views on the Bill. The consultation closed on 12 May 2010. 

Of the 601 people and organisations who gave written evidence to the Committee, only 6.5 per cent (39) were in favour of it.

The full report of the Committee, which reviews and considers all the evidence, both written and oral, has now come to the conclusion that the Bill should not proceed.

Care Not Killing, an organisation promoting palliative care and opposing euthanasia, has outlined why the Bill should be rejected:

The scope of the Bill is incredibly broad. It would offer assisted suicide to people who are to some degree dependent on others and would include those with life threatening and non life-threatening disabilities, and those with relatively common conditions such as, for example, insulin-dependent diabetes, heart or lung disease.
 
Tens of thousands of seriously ill and disabled people throughout Scotland would fall within its remit.

The Bill purports to allow assisted suicide (where a patient is provided with lethal drugs by a physician for self-administration). In fact it goes much further. It would also legalise euthanasia (where a physician administers lethal drugs to a patient directly).

The drafting of the Bill is vague and full of euphemisms and ambiguities. Among others, there is no definition of what it is to find life 'intolerable' and the methods by which life would be legally terminated are not identified.

The Bill is not clear on what means can be used to end a person's life. One might assume that it is envisages lethal drugs but this is not specified and therefore the 'means of administration' might conceivably include gas (carbon monoxide or helium), hanging, a bullet or a push off a cliff.

Safeguards are seriously defective. Among others, there is real doubt that the suggested medical assessments would be sufficient to discern that the patient is not under external pressure to request assisted suicide.

The Bill contains no specified procedures by which doctors would report their involvement with an assisted suicide. This makes meaningful audit of how the law was working highly problematic.

It places responsibility for providing “end of life assistance” on the shoulders of Scottish doctors, for whom it contains no 'conscience clause' and the majority of whom would not be prepared to participate in implementing the proposals of the Bill.

The Bill is intended to 'enable a person to die with dignity and a minimum of distress'. This is already provided through good health care and particularly palliative medicine.

The vast majority of medical practitioners and all the Royal Colleges of Medicine do not support assisted suicide.

The Scottish Parliament has already had two opportunities to discuss assisted suicide. On both occasions the legalization of assisted suicide was convincingly rejected.

For society to accept assisted suicide or euthanasia means it agrees that some lives no longer have any meaning, value or worth.

Having assisted suicide legislation in place sends a message to vulnerable, ill, and elderly people that they should take up the option of assisted suicide so as not to be a burden.

Evidence from the Netherlands and the US state of Oregon – where assisted suicide is currently legal - shows that it is impossible to prevent abuses from occurring.

Almost 9 out of every 10 of the 600 responses to the Parliament's consultation opposed the Bill.

Well over 20,000 people have signed up to the Care Not Killing postcard campaign opposing the Bill. This is by far and away the biggest campaign response since the Scottish Parliament was established.


Resources
You can read the Christian Concern submission to the Committee here.
You can watch the debate online at www.holyrood.tv.