Pages to Show
- DC Home
- Dore Memo to Congress and the President
- Dore Suicide Contagion Memo
- Quick Facts About DC Act 21-577
- Patients Can Have Years or Decades to Live
- Few States Allow Assisted Suicide
- The Oregon Experience is B.S.
- C & C Promotes Suicide
- Act Creates Legal Elder Abuse
- Legal Assisted Suicide Traumatic
- "I would be dead"
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Few States Allow Assisted Suicide
By Margaret K. Dore, Esq., MBA
"Physician-assisted suicide is no longer legal in New Mexico." |
Last year, the New Mexico Supreme Court overturned a decision recognizing a right to physician aid in dying, meaning physician-assisted suicide.[2] Physician-assisted suicide is no longer legal in New Mexico.
The Act Applies to People with Years or Decades to Live
By Margaret Dore, Esq., MBA
William Toffler, MD |
The Act applies to persons with a “terminal disease,” meaning those predicted to have less than six months to live.[1] Such persons may actually have years or decades to live. This is true for three reasons:
A. Treatment Can Lead to Recovery
In 2000, Oregonian Jeanette Hall was given a terminal diagnosis of six months to a year to live, which was based on her not being treated for cancer.[2] Hall made a settled decision to use Oregon’s law, but her doctor convinced her to be treated instead. In a 2016 declaration, she states:
This July, it will be 16 years since my diagnosis. If [my doctor] had believed in assisted suicide, I would be dead.[3]
"Even If a Patient Struggled, Who Would Know?"
By Margaret Dore, Esq., MBA
The DC Act allows the death by lethal dose to occur in private without supervision.[1] The drugs used are water and alcohol soluble, such that they can be administered to a restrained or sleeping person without consent.[2] Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director for the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, puts it this way:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)