Source: https://www.nyscatholic.org/fatal-flaws/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 03:54:24+00:00

Document:
Proponents of the so-called “Medical Aid-in-Dying Act” argue that it contains safeguards which protect vulnerable patients. Yet a close examination of the bill’s language reveals inadequate protections for patients most at risk of abuse, and lower medical standards than elsewhere in the Public Health Law. The bill lacks transparency and accountability, and contains extremely weak conscience protections for both health care professionals and health care institutions. In short, it is unsafe for all involved.
The definition of “terminal illness or condition” increases the risk of errors in diagnosis.
The bill defines a “terminal illness or condition” as “an incurable and irreversible illness or condition that has been medically confirmed and will, within reasonable medical judgment, produce death within six months” § 2899-d(17).
Virtually anything could qualify under this definition, including a chronic illness like diabetes or ALS that would cause death if the person declined ordinary treatment. Patients who cannot afford expensive treatments would be particularly at risk due to this definition.
This is a significantly lower standard for diagnosis than the “reasonable degree of medical certainty” that is used in comparable provisions of the law. See, e.g., Public Health Law § 2994-a(5) (the Family Health Care Decisions Act), Public Health Law § 2963(2) (determining capacity to make decisions regarding cardiopulmonary resuscitation), and Surrogate Court Procedure Act § 1726(4)(a) (relating to health care decisions for persons with mental retardation).
Given the inherent uncertainty of making a prognosis of the amount of time a person may live, this lower standard puts patients at risk.
The standard for determining capacity is too weak.
The “capacity” standard is clearly inadequate, which is a crucial flaw since this is the threshold determination of whether a patient can even make a request for suicide assistance.
No psychological screening, counseling, diagnosis or treatment is required.
There is no mandatory referral of the patient to a psychiatrist to determine if they are suffering from a treatable mental illness that led to the suicide request (e.g., clinical depression).
Instead, a referral is only optional and it is limited to determining if the patient has decision-making capacity § 2988-f(c).
Even if a referral is made, there is no requirement that it be done by a physician or psychiatrist — the bill only requires an evaluation by a “mental health professional”, which includes nurse practitioner or physician assistant or psychologist. §§ 2899-i(1) and 2899-d(11).
There is no requirement that the patient’s family be notified, which isolates the patient from the very people who can provide them with the support they need.
The bill thus essentially abandons vulnerable patients who are suffering from treatable psychological conditions.
There are inadequate protections for patients when the request is made.
The bill has weak witness requirements. This is problematic because patients, particularly isolated elderly patients in long-term care facilities, are vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.
The bill requires two witnesses to a patient’s written request for assisted suicide. But one of the witnesses can a person entitled to a portion of the patient’s estate, or a person associate associated with the health care facility where the patient is receiving treatment.
There is no requirement that the witnesses even know the patient prior to the suicide request. § 2899-e(3). Instead, the witnesses are permitted merely to certify that the patient “provided proof of identity”. 2899-k.
There is no waiting period between the time of the request and the time when the suicide medicine can be dispensed.
There is no requirement that the patient be a New York resident. This means that New York could turn into a suicide destination, and death on request will be available to vulnerable people with no connection to our state or to the treating physician.
The bill does not specifically exclude surrogate decisions by a guardian, health care proxy or a surrogate appointed by law. This is dangerous since these other laws grant wide authority to make surrogate health decisions. For example, the Family Health Care Decisions Act states that “the surrogate shall have the authority to make any and all health care decisions on the adult patient’s behalf that the patient could make.” Public Health Law § 2994-D(3)(i). Without a specific exclusion, a person who is incapacitated could have the assisted suicide decision made for them by someone else.
There are no protections for the patient after the drugs are dispensed.
Once the patient receives the pills, there are no protections. There is no oversight as to when, where, with whom, etc. the patient actually takes the lethal dosage of medication.
There is no requirement that the patient’s decision-making capacity be evaluated at the time that they self-administer the lethal drugs.
There is no way to ensure that the patient isn’t being coerced into taking the lethal medication.
There is no requirement of any follow-up evaluation by the physician, to determine if the patient’s condition has changed or if other treatments have become available.
There is no requirement of any further evaluation by a mental health professional, to determine if the patient is suffering from a mental illness (e.g., clinical depression).
No physician or other health professional is required to be present at the time the patient takes the lethal pills. The patient may thus suffer unnecessarily.
There is no way to ensure that only the patient is taking the medicine. The drugs can be diverted to others.
There is a provision that “a person in control of the unused medications shall personally deliver the unused medication for disposal to the nearest qualified .. ” § 2899-o. But there is no enforcement mechanism or accountability.
The lack of patient protection at the time the drugs are administered is even more dangerous, given the lack of transparency and oversight in the bill (see Points 7 and 8, below).
Patients are stripped of existing legal protections.
The bill states that “A patient who requests medication under this article shall not, because of that request, be considered to be a person who is suicidal, and self-administering medication under this article shall not be deemed to be suicide, for any purpose.” § 2899-n(1)(a). This would strip patients of important legal protections.
Under current law, persons who are at risk of harming themselves are given extensive protection under Mental Hygiene Law Article 9. That statute permits the involuntary commitment of any person who may be in danger of harming herself, so that they can be evaluated and treated by mental health practitioners. There are also extensive due process provisions in that law to ensure that the person’s rights are being protected.
Other vulnerable patients may be protected by the appointment of a guardian or conservator pursuant to Mental Hygiene Law Article 81. There are also substantial due process requirements that are designed to ensure the safety of the patient.
This excludes the possibility of invoking significant legal protections from vulnerable patients, and creates an invidious double standard — terminally ill patients are denied rights and due processes that are available to all others.
Intentional false statements on death certificates hide the truth.
The bill’s definition of “medical aid in dying” acknowledges that the medicine is the cause of death, not the underlying illness (“the medical practice of a physician prescribing medication to a qualified individual that the individual may choose to self-administer to bring about death“). This fits any reasonable definition of “suicide”.
But instead of listing the cause of death as suicide, the bill requires that the physician lie on the death certificate. The bill specifically states that “the death certificate shall indicate that the cause of death was the underlying terminal illness or condition of the patient.” § 2899-p(2).
Under any other circumstance, a deliberate false statement on a death certificate would be a crime. Penal Law 175.30, Public Health Law § 4102(1)(a).
The failure to identify suicide as the actual cause of death will hamper efforts to oversee the implementation of the law, since information on death certificates will not be reliable and there will be no way to determine if physician-assisted suicides have actually occurred.
The bill also prohibits insurance companies from denying benefits to any person who commits suicide. Together with the false statement that is required on the death certificate, this creates clear incentive for insurance fraud, and thus for undue influence or coercion.
There will be no effective accountability and oversight to prevent abuses.
The bill immunizes the physician and other health professionals from any criminal, civil or professional liability, so long as they acted with “reasonable good faith”. § 2899-l(1).
This “good faith” defense and blanket exclusion clause completely negate the purported penalty provisions elsewhere in the bill (see§ 2899-l(2) and 2899-r(2)) and prevents any meaningful oversight by law enforcement officials.
There is no mechanism for a systematic evaluation and oversight by public health authorities.
There is no requirement that a report be made to the Health Department whenever action is taken under the statute. See 2899-j (requiring only entries in the patient’s health record, but not requiring any report to public authorities).
The bill requires an annual review by the Department of Health of a sample of patient records, but there is no mechanism for identifying those records or ensuring that they are a representative sample. § 2899-q(1).
Any records collected by the Department are completely shielded from being produced pursuant to the Freedom of Information Law. § 2899-q(1). As a result, if this bill were enacted, there is no possibility for independent evaluation of how the law is being implemented.
Although the bill does require the Department to issue an annual report, this will have no real value because of the incompleteness of the records and the lack of independent review. § 2899-q(2).
This lack of oversight capability will make it impossible to track the incidence of assisted suicide, or to ascertain whether the law is being abused.
There is inadequate conscience protection for individuals.
The term “provision of medication” is not broad enough to encompass all religious or moral objections to participating in assisted suicide. For example, many people would have a religious or moral objection to counseling, referring, etc. The definition also does not adequately protect those who provide indirect assistance, such as the pharmacist dispensing the medicine.
This is a particular danger, because the Palliative Care Information Act requires that when presented with a terminally ill patient, health care practitioners “shall offer to provide the patient with information and counseling regarding palliative care and end-of-life options appropriate to the patient”. Public Health Law § 2997-c(2)(a).
If the practitioner has an objection, the Palliative Care Information Act requires that they refer the patient to another person who will provide that information. Public Health Law 2997-c(3). This kind of referral is still morally impermissible cooperation in a suicide.
There is insufficient conscience protection for institutions.
The bill appears to provide some conscience protection for “health facilities”.
But the bill defines “health facilities” only to include general hospitals, nursing homes and residential health care facilities. § 2899-d(5).
This would not include hospice facilities, doctor’s offices, ambulatory clinics, specialty hospitals, home health agencies, residential care facilities for the mentally disabled, or other specialized institutions.
This would put a significant number of institutions, including religious institutions and the people who work in them, at risk of having no effective conscience protections.
In addition, a private health care facility is permitted to prohibit only “the prescribing, dispensing, ordering or self-administering of medication under this article while the patient is being treated in or while the patient is residing in the health care facility”. § 2899-m(2)(a) (emphasis added).
As a result, a facility cannot discipline any person on their staff who counsels or participates in an assisted suicide off premises.
The health care facility can only decline to participate if it informs patients and transfers patients who request suicide to another facility that is “willing to permit the prescribing, dispensing, ordering and self-administering of medication”. 2899-m(2)(b).
This kind of referral requires institutions to cooperate in suicide, since it involves knowingly providing a person with the means and opportunity to obtain the morally objectionable act.

References: § 2899
 § 2994
 § 2963
 § 1726
 § 2988
 § 2899
 § 2994
 § 2899
 § 2899
 § 2899
 § 4102
 § 2899
 § 2899
 § 2899
 § 2899
 § 2997
 § 2899
 § 2899