Suicide – Physician Assisted Part II
Lethal
Prescriptions Allowed (from the Associated Press)
Doctors, Pharmacists to Proceed Cautiously
The Washington Times, Monday,
March 2, 2009
Printed with permission
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Olympia, Washington (AP) Terminally ill patients with less than six months to live will soon be able to ask their doctors to prescribe lethal medication in Washington state.
But even though the “Death with Dignity” law takes effect Thursday, people who might seek the life-ending prescriptions could find their doctors conflicted or even not willing to write them.
Many doctors are hesitant to talk publicly about where they stand on the issue, said Dr. Tom Preston, a retired cardiologist and board member of Compassion & Choices, the group that campaigned for and supports the law.
“There are a lot of doctors who in principle would approve or don’t mind this, but for a lot of social or professional reasons, they don’t want to be involved,” he said.
But Dr. Preston said discussions about end-of-life issues between doctor and patient will increase because of the new law, and he thinks that as time goes on, more doctors who don’t have a religious or philosophical opposition will be open to participating. “It will be a cultural shift,” he said.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2006 that it was up to states to regulate medical practice, including assisted suicide, and Washington’s Initiative 1000 was passed by nearly 60 percent of state voters in November.
It became the second state, behind Oregon, to have a voter-approved measure allowing assisted suicide.
In December, a Montana district judge ruled that doctor-assisted suicides are legal. That decision, which was base on an individual lawsuit, is now before the Montana Supreme Court. Although Montana doctors are allowed to write prescriptions pending the appeal, it’s not known whether any actually have, because there’s no reporting process.
Under the Oregon and Washington laws, physicians and pharmacists are not required to write or fill lethal prescriptions if they are opposed to the law. Some Washington hospitals are opting out of participation, which precludes their doctors from participating on hospital property.
Dr. Stu Farber, director of the palliative care consult service at the University of Washington Medical Center, voted against the measure and doesn’t plan to prescribe lethal medication to his patients for now.
“I am not here to tell people how they should either live their life or the end of their life,” he said. “There’s possibly a story out there, in the future, that’s so compelling that maybe I should write a prescription.”
He said he would refer patients to Compassion & Choices of Washington, the state’s largest aid-in-dying advocacy group, after talking about how they came to their decision.
The advocacy group is compiling a directory of physicians who aren’t opting out the of law, as well as pharmacies willing to fill the prescriptions, executive director Robb Miller said.
Dr. Robert Thompson, an internist and cardiologist at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle who voted for the measure, said that in his 32 years of practice, he has treated patients who would have benefited from this law.
“I believe for the sake of compassion, and for a person’s own individual rights, that this should be an option for them,” he said.
Washington’s
law is based on Oregon’s measure, which took effect in late 1997. Since then,
more than 340 people – mostly ailing wit cancer – have used that state’s measure
to end their lives.